Classic Audiobook Collection - Sydney Past and Present by John Arthur Barry ~ Full Audiobook [history]

Episode Date: November 6, 2024

Sydney Past and Present by John Arthur Barry audiobook. Genre: history Written with a journalist's eye and a storyteller's timing, Sydney Past and Present invites listeners into the making of Austral...ia's first colonial city. John Arthur Barry traces Sydney's growth from its early settlement years through the great surges of the nineteenth century, building his narrative from vivid episodes first published as a popular series in the Town and Country Journal. Rather than offering a dry timeline, Barry people-watches his way through history: governors and grand schemes, working wharves and rough streets, sudden booms and anxious slumps, and the everyday characters who turned a remote outpost into a confident port city. Moving decade by decade, he sketches the changing look and feel of Sydney - its transport and waterfront, its new suburbs and islands, its entertainments and sporting life, and the civic problems that arrive with population and profit. Along the way, he captures the assumptions, prejudices, and ambitions of the era that produced the modern city, letting the past sound alive in its own voice. The result is an anecdotal, accessible city biography that makes Sydney's transformation feel immediate and personal. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:21:29) Chapter 02 (00:40:27) Chapter 03 (01:02:14) Chapter 04 (01:21:22) Chapter 05 (01:44:34) Chapter 06 (02:07:55) Chapter 07 (02:31:12) Chapter 08 (03:00:43) Chapter 09 (03:29:13) Chapter 10 (03:54:06) Chapter 11 (04:21:45) Chapter 12 (04:51:22) Chapter 13 (05:15:03) Chapter 14 (05:40:01) Chapter 15 (06:04:22) Chapter 16 (06:29:29) Chapter 17 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Chapter 1 of the City of Sydney The Story of Its Growth from Its Foundation to the Present By John Arthur Barry Chapter 1 The founding of the city The founder of Sydney was Captain Arthur Philip who in 1788 discovered that Port Jackson,
Starting point is 00:00:19 in place of being the mere open bay that Cook years earlier had taken it for, was in reality one of the finest harbours in the world, with space in its waters for a score of navies on its shores for as many cities. In 1770, Captain Kuq had discovered Botany Bay and recommended it to the government as a good site for a colony. But it was not until 18 years later that,
Starting point is 00:00:46 wanting a site for a convict settlement, the authorities of the day bethought themselves of Botany Bay and sent Captain Arthur Philip in charge of 11 ships, since known as the first fleet to establish himself on its shores. But Philip didn't care about botany. Water, he said, was scarce, the soil comparatively poor,
Starting point is 00:01:09 and unable to endorse Cook's glowing eulogy, the captain decided to go further afield and explore the coast to the northward. This he did in three open boats. More out of curiosity than otherwise, they turned in between the heads to have a look at Cooke's open bay in which there appear to be good anchorage, and thus was discovered the wonderful harbour
Starting point is 00:01:33 and the site of the future capital of the colony. After first landing at Manly Beach, so named because of the courage shown by the natives, a spot for the settlement was eventually selected on the banks of a small freshwater stream that fell into a cove on the southern side of the harbour. Soon the whole fleet came round and brought up in the little bay, which was promptly named Sydney Cove in compliment of the Secretary of State.
Starting point is 00:02:02 In it, to use Philip's own words, ships can anchor so close to the shore that has a very small expense, keys may be made at which the largest ships may unload. This cove is about a quarter of a mile across at the entrance and half a mile in length. And here did the old Sirius and her consorts anchor in that space of water,
Starting point is 00:02:25 surrounded by the sight of what is known to us now as circular key. Low hills, scrubgrown, ran down to the water's edge and represented the position of the future capital of a little more than a century later, when ocean steamers by the score should line the wharves of the cove and the highest developments of science, commerce and art have combined to form the great city behind and around it. But to return, a space having been,
Starting point is 00:02:56 been cleared in the scrub, large enough the military and convicts to camp upon, on the 26th day of January, a company came ashore near the spot where, in Macquarie Place, now stands the obelisk, the stone from which all the roads in the colony take their distance and measurement. The national flag was hoisted, the Marines saluted and fired three volleys, and the governor, surrounded by his officers, proposed the healths of the king and the royal family, and success to the new colony. Later, on the 7th of February, they took place another ceremony, no less impressive, when the colonists, numbering 130, were all assembled. The convicts seated in a half circle, the Marines paraded in front of them, and the officers grouped in the centre.
Starting point is 00:03:47 Then Collins, the judge-advocate, read the Governor's Commission and the Commission of the other officers, also the Act establishing the colony and other formal documents. Then the Marines fired three volleys and the first governor of New South Wales, after thanking his officers and soldiers for their behaviour so far, addressed the convicts, promising rewards to those who conducted themselves well, unsparing severity to offenders. After his speech the colonists dispersed, whilst Philip and his principal officers, partook of a cold repast, already laid out in a marquee. During the proceedings at intervals the band played,
Starting point is 00:04:30 and after the commissions were read, God Save the King was performed, and thus was consummated the founding of the colony. The residence of the governor, what he quaintly calls his canvas house, and the tents of the officers were pitched on the east side of the Little Creek, presently known as the tank stream, with the flagstaff reared in front of them,
Starting point is 00:04:54 and close too were planted the various fruit trees procured at Rio de Janeiro and the Cape of Good Hope. The Marines and convicts in their charge were housed in huts on the west side of the cove. Philip writes to his patron, Lord Sidney, I have the honour to enclose your lordship the intended plan for the town. The lieutenant-governor has already begun a small house which forms one corner of the parade and I am building a small cottage on the east side of the cove where I shall remain for the present with part of the convicts and an officer's guard.
Starting point is 00:05:31 The convicts are distributed in huts which are built only for immediate shelter. On the point of land, now Dawes Point, which forms the west side of the cove, an observatory is building under the direction of lieutenant doors who is charged by the Board of Longitude with observing the expected comet.
Starting point is 00:05:51 We now make very good bricks, and the stone is good, but do not find either limestone or chalk. The principal streets are placed so as to admit a free circulation of air and a 200 feet wide, and in such wise was the founding of the city of Sydney. Unfortunately, succeeding governors altered those wisely laid-out streets of Phillips, with the result of giving us the miserable lanes of the present day. All this, however, was the work of much time and labour, and for long only the principal officers could boast of being lodged in wooden huts. For the rest it was still canvas.
Starting point is 00:06:35 The hard gum timber blunted and broke the shoddy tools of the workmen, who in addition were anything but mechanics. Also, there were continual complications and troubles to retard the progress of the infant colony and its capital. Philip writes, I am very sorry to say that not only a great part of the clothing, particularly the women's, is very bad, but most of the axes, spades, and shovels,
Starting point is 00:07:03 the worst that ever were seen. The provision is as good, of the seeds and corn sent from England, parts has been destroyed by the weevil. The rest is in good order. Most pathetic and forlorn must have appeared to us, could we of this latter day have seen it then, the little settlement on the shores of the country,
Starting point is 00:07:24 cove, with its few scattered buildings, most of them formed of rough boards nailed to a few upright posts, shabbily covered with bark, and situated mainly on the hill lying to the north-west of the cove. Stumps of trees studded the hardly indicated streets, no wharves, even of the rudest description, had yet been formed. Except around the mouth of the tank stream, the scrub grew thick to the water's edge, and loomed grey and monotonous on every inland hill, on every harbour headland. And to those of us who, passing to and fro the cove of today, and threading the busy streets of the great city behind it, ever cast a thought of the scene it must have presented in those early months, years even, the whole thing should appear a little less than a miracle. But despite
Starting point is 00:08:18 all hardships, trials and sufferings, the stout heart of the brave founder never failed him, his patience nor his absolute faith ever wavered he however was the sole exception let us see for instance what the lieutenant-governor ross has to say about the business writing to under-secretary nepean he wails take my word for it there is not a man in this place he should have accepted his superior but wishes to return home and indeed they have no less than cause for i believe There never was a set of people so much upon the parish as this garrison is, and what little we want, even to a single nail, we must not send to the commissary for it, but must apply to His Excellency for it, and when we do, he always says,
Starting point is 00:09:10 there is but little come out, and it is but little we get. If you want a true description of the country, it is only to be found amongst many of the private letters sent home. However, I will in confidence, venture to assure you that this country will never answer to settle in, for although I think corn will grow here, yet I am convinced that if ever it is able to maintain the people here, it cannot be in less time than probably a hundred years hence.
Starting point is 00:09:40 I therefore think it will be cheaper to feed the convicts on turtle and venison at the London tavern than to be at the expense of sending them here. This was written only six months after landing, and early though this was to show the white feather, the dreariness of the outlook and the weary hopelessness of the life might have excused a much stronger man than Ross was for weakening under the strain. There, however, can be no excuse for his incessant grumbling
Starting point is 00:10:09 and attempt to put every possible obstacle in the governor's way instead of doing what he could to help him through his many and constant troubles. As time passed, bricks were made, stones hewn, timber-shaped, and houses built, in spite of difficulties which had at first sight, appeared almost insurmountable. The winter rains made matters terribly uncomfortable for both bond and free,
Starting point is 00:10:37 but the hardships thus engendered acted as a spur to them to provide efficient shelter from the elements. Thus in the winter of 1788, we find the settlers busily employed in carrying out the details of Philip's plan, long since dispatched to Lord Sydney. Barracks for Marines were erected, houses for the Governor and the Lieutenant Governor.
Starting point is 00:11:02 The hospital was roofed with shingles and the observatory begun at the future Doors Point. This last building, however, was scarcely finished before it was found to be too small, not only for its principal object, but to accommodate the Lieutenant's family. So the Masons and other workmen set about building another observatory in the same spot.
Starting point is 00:11:25 On the other hand, the barracks, when finished, proved far too large for the military alone, and therefore was partially used as a store. The greatest inconvenience was felt throughout these operations for lack of men with any practical knowledge of building and the other trades necessary to make any progress with the erection of the city. In October 1789 came about a rather momentous event,
Starting point is 00:11:52 no less than the launching of the first book, boat built in the colony. This craft was intended for the transport of stores from the newly formed farm at Rose Hill, close to where Parramatta now stands. The boat was a huge and unwieldy specimen of the builder's art. The convicts called it satirically the Rose Hill packet. Then, learning by much hard experience how difficult it was to shift her, they altered that fancy name to the more appropriate one, of the lump.
Starting point is 00:12:24 A magazine was about this time erected near the observatory and a house built for the judge advocate. The roadways, bogs in wet weather and dust heaps in dry, were made a little more passable towards Christmas time. Also a guardhouse was built on the east side of the cove, close to the bridge that had been thrown over the tank stream. In the beginning of 1790, a flagstaff was erected at the south head,
Starting point is 00:12:53 by means of which the arrival of ships could be signalled. to the infant Sydney, and from there, during the terrible year of 90, many anxious eyes swept the desolate ocean for signs of that relief so eagerly expected. Food was giving out and necessaries of every description, and famine stared the embryo colony in the face. For nearly two years the colonists had been isolated. Apparently the home government had forgotten their very existence, notwithstanding many appeals from Philip. And but for that same Philip, it is quite possible that not only would there be no Sydney today,
Starting point is 00:13:33 but that Australia would be under French or Dutch rule instead of British. If Ross, for instance, had been in Philip's place, the chances are 20 to 1, that on his lacrimose representations, all attempt at colonisation would have been abandoned. But fortunately for us and for England too, Philip, the naval sea captain, was the man of all men fitted for the occasion.
Starting point is 00:14:01 Famine was upon him and his charges, and night and day the seamen of the Sirius kept watch at the new Flagstaff in hopes of being able to signal to the town the approach of those supply ships that everybody believed with the most implicit faith must be long ere this well on their way from England. But the events of this memorable year are 1790, a history,
Starting point is 00:14:26 and Sydney, owing to disease and famine, grew little or nothing in size during it. A fresh storehouse was finished, and a landing place formed at the head of the cove, and, the bad year once passed, the young settlement seems to have steadily, if slowly, grown and spread, first along the foreshores, and the course of the tank stream, until, cradled though it had been in despair and famine, and handicapped by the quality of its inhabitants, it presently began to be apparent to everyone that there was forming on the shores of the cove, the nucleus of a city.
Starting point is 00:15:03 In 1792, Philip left the colony and went home to England, more secure than ever in the belief, which, indeed, had never deserted him, that the prosperity of the settlement was thoroughly assured. One incident of 91 should be noted in that the first convict settler who had made a declaration that he was able to support himself
Starting point is 00:15:26 on a farm he had occupied for 15 months, received a grant of 140 acres of land. At the present day, many of our settlers would be only too proud to be able to declare a similar fact. In 1792, flour was 9 pence per pound, potatoes were 3 pence per pound. A sheep cost £10 £10 shillings,
Starting point is 00:15:50 a milk goat, £8 £8 shillings, breeding sows each, £7 £7 £7.7. shillings to £10 shillings. Laying fowls, 10 shillings. By these figures it may be seen what terrific value was attached to livestock of any description in these early days. Tea was a luxury indeed
Starting point is 00:16:12 at 8 shillings to 16 shillings per pound. Sugar was comparatively cheap at 1 shillings and 6pence per pound. Spirits at 12 shillings to 20 shillings per gallon were cheaper than at present and Porter at one shilling per quart was within the reach of most people. At this time, and for a score of years afterwards, it must be remembered that spirits, chiefly rum,
Starting point is 00:16:38 with the ordinary currency of the colony. When Hunter arrived in 1795, the whole population, with the exception of 179, was dependent on the public stores for rations. Briefly, the events of his five years' term embraced the first use of the printing press, the discovery of the lost herd of cattle, and the forming of the settlement of Newcastle on the Hunter River.
Starting point is 00:17:08 So far as Sydney itself was concerned, the only building of importance seems to have been that of the first school. Here 300 children were taught, and, after service each Sunday, catacised by the Reverend of Mr. Johnson. Various windmills too were erected to grind the settlers' corn, This was done gratuitously by the government. In 1800, Captain Hunter was superseded by Captain King.
Starting point is 00:17:38 During the latter's term, the female orphan school, of which more and on, was founded. The first issue of copper coin took place. A notable incident was the establishment by a prisoner, George Howe, of the first Australian newspaper, known as the Sydney Gazette and the New South Wales advertiser. This was in 1803, and original files of this ancient newspaper, are now so scarce as to be very valuable. The editorial address accompanying the first issue runs, innumerable as the obstacles were,
Starting point is 00:18:15 which threatened to oppose our undertaking, yet we are happy to affirm that they are not unsurmountable, however difficult the task before us. The utility of a paper in the colony, as it must open a source of solid information, will, we hope, be universally felt and acknowledged. We have courted the assistance of the ingenious and intelligent. We open no channel to political discussion or personal animadversion. Information is our only purpose.
Starting point is 00:18:48 That accomplished, we shall consider that we have done our duty in exertion to merit the approbation of the public, and so secure a liberal patronage to the Sydney Gazette. End of Chapter 2 of the City of Sydney by John Arthur Barry. This Librivox recording is in the public domain. Weekly infancy For many years, Sydney does not appear to have made much headway. Even in 1816 to 1817, Wulamulu was a dense scrub
Starting point is 00:19:24 in which it was very easy to get bushed, whilst T, T-E-A, sometimes wrongly called T-I, tree grew freely throughout the city in streets and open places. Thatched houses and mud huts formed the majority of the buildings. Where the town hall now stands was a public cemetery, although not the earliest, for a burying ground had been earlier made further north. The cathedral grounds of today were a favourite camp for drovers and cattle dealers,
Starting point is 00:19:54 and everywhere roamed the Aborigine. George Street, named after the reigning monarch, started from Doors Point and ran along the western side of the cove. The only public wharf was that already referred to and known as kings. There all the merchandise of the colony was landed. Near the wharf, the now almost neglected tank stream flowed into the cove. Houses were scarce and scattered,
Starting point is 00:20:22 where the mariner's church stands, there was one of the few weatherboard cottages. On the other side of the cove were situated the government's boat sheds. The roads were still mere bush tracks of dirt or mud, according to the weather. For some inscrutable reason other, an orphanage had been built at the corner of Bridge Street. Apparently the authorities expected a prolific crop of orphans. These, however, proved so scarce that in a few years the building was abandoned and the land subdivided and sold.
Starting point is 00:20:53 Out of this rearrangement, Queen's place was formed. There was a bank, the Australia, at the corner of George and Essex streets, and here took place the first Australian bank robbery. The thieves tunne
Starting point is 00:21:07 from a drain in an adjacent paddock until they reached the strong room, and forcing that, got away in safety with much plunder. Where the Bank of Australia now stands were the government's stores, whence rations were served out to the convicts. Across Bridge Street, the tank stream flowed sluggishly,
Starting point is 00:21:26 spanned by its thick-set bridge of a pattern seen over country brooks in England. The origin of the word tank may not be generally known. It seems that a butcher at that time had his shopping Hunter Street and his land extended back to the stream. On one side of his property were a number of excavations or tanks cut out of the solid rock, and in these the soldiers' wives washed clothes. Other accounts, however, say that out of these tanks the town derived its water supply. The two stories, even in those days, could hardly be compatible. Probably the latter is correct. On the site of our present General Post Office did a small house in a fruit garden, whilst nearby was a clump of detached cottages and some fenced in paddocks.
Starting point is 00:22:17 At the corner of George and Barak Streets was, in 1817, a cow-yard. which fronted George Street for a considerable distance. In the cottage next to the Milkmans lived a Turner and next him stood a three-roomed public house. The above is a facsimile of the copper plate which was discovered in March 1899 when excavating a telephone tunnel near the corner of Philip and Bridge Streets.
Starting point is 00:22:43 Collins, the contemporary historian of the First Fleet, describes the laying of the foundation of the First Government House and relates how this plate was then deposited. Collins prints the inscription, which last year saw the light for the first time for 111 years. Readers note, the inscription reads, His Excellency, Arthur Philippe Esquire, Governor-in-chief and Captain General
Starting point is 00:23:09 in and over the territory of New South Wales, landed in this cove with the first settlers of this country, the 24th day of January 1788, and on the 15th day of May, in the same year, being the 28th of the reign of His Present Majesty, George III, the first of these stones was laid. End of reader's note. The site of the old markets was enclosed by a strong four-railed fence, and here were a number of sheds for the display of produce brought in by the settlers. North of the market stood a wooden pillory, large enough to hold a couple of offenders.
Starting point is 00:23:47 prisoners sentenced to floggings were brought to this place, tied to a cart-tail and publicly whipped in view of the crowd of marketing women. On the side of the present cathedral, in a Wattle and Dorb cottage, lived drover. In this cottage he was one day found dead and dying in testate, the property thought little of at the time, reverted to the crown, and eventually was secured by the Church of England authorities, to whom Governor Macquarie made a grant of it. Later, he laid the foundation stone of the present cathedral.
Starting point is 00:24:22 As one's stocks would not suffice, there were, in conspicuous places about the city, four more. As long before as 1796, Sydney's first theatre had been opened. Certainly it could not have been much of a building, costing as it did, only £100. The first play performed in it was Dr. Young's tragedy, The Revenge, a piece long since dead, and forgotten, but which in the latter part of the 17th century had no small reputation as a public favourite. But it is the prologue of the old play that, first-mouthed in the first Australian theatre, made the occasion so memorable, and forever rescued from oblivion the title, at least, of Young's play. And although the passage alluded to above is one of the stock quotations of
Starting point is 00:25:13 the language, it may not be out of place to here give the four famous opening line. from distant climes or widespread seas we come though not with much a clap or beat of drum true patriots we for be it understood we left our country for our country's good the tariff of admission was not extravagant or does not seem so to us seeing that a seat in the gallery the fashionable part of the house in those days cost only one shilling cash or its equivalent in spirits flour meat or other necessaries This, however, so it is said, was not actually the first entertainment of its kind in the colony, in as much as a performance of Farquhar's The Recruiting Office has been traced back to June 4, 1789, the birthday of George III, on which date some prisoners were graciously permitted to show their loyalty to their sovereign by acting this play. The 1796 Theatre came to a bad ending. Whether truly or not, it was said that, over the only to its establishment, crime increased to such an extent that the governor ordered it to be
Starting point is 00:26:23 pulled down, and for some years, despian entertainments were not heard of except as private indulgences. Authorities are divided as to the authorship of the prologue, although it has been generally attributed to the notorious convict, George Barrington. This claim is, however, strongly contested by the late Mr Samuel Bennett in his valuable work, the history of New South Wales. in which the author considers it highly probable that the lines were written by lieutenant-colonle Collins, and that the fathering them upon Barrington was merely by way of joke. Be this as it may. The prologue, apart from the single verse given, is an extremely clever bit of work,
Starting point is 00:27:05 teeming with slight allusions to the former proclivities of the actors. The open haymarket space of today was in those years, 1817 to 1820, occupied by the government's brickyards, hence the brickfield hill of our own time. In the meantime, the site of the present town hall had been occupied by a public pound, which, when the ground was presently required for other purposes, was removed to that upon which the brickfield stood.
Starting point is 00:27:36 Also, upon the hay market, was situated the first toll bar. A paddock extended from here, right through to Hay Street, whilst a creek ran out into a large pond that took up most of Ultimo. It was known as Dixon's Pond and was a common resort of the citizens when they felt like going for an afternoon's duck shooting. There were few other streets, and these mostly nameless, besides the ones already mentioned. Bush tracks to be made into thoroughfares later on abounded.
Starting point is 00:28:08 Before Governor Macquarie appeared on the scene, there were indeed no streets. The sparsely built upon and straggling ways were known as rows. But in Macquarie's time these were altered. Thus, Pitts Row became Pitt Street, Soldiers Row Park Street, Back Soldiers Row, Kent Street, etc. Market Street was merely a boggy lane, Willamaloo, a farm, and Hyde Park a race course. Tribes of blacks roamed about, botany, north shore and manly, and camped around and in the infant city itself.
Starting point is 00:28:42 The Botanic Gardens Farm Cove and most of the Bay Shores and Headlands were all primitive bush. On the banks of the Little Creek in the gardens, then a sparkling stream, now a sluggish pond, bridged and with its course obstructed, was a favourite corrobory ground of the natives. The present university grounds were known as Grosses Farm,
Starting point is 00:29:06 but the other suburbs, Newtown, Marrickville, Leichhardt, Glebe and Forest Lodge were all thick bush, with perhaps here and there the small cleared patch of some enterprising settler. The barracks lay between George, Clarence, Margaret and Barrack streets, and are remarkable only as the scene of the first step towards Bly's deposition by Major Johnson and the New South Wales Corps of notorious memory. The drums beat to arms. The New South Wales Corps, most of them men primed with rum,
Starting point is 00:29:39 formed in the barrack square, and with fixed bits of them, baynets, colours flying and band playing, march to Government House, led by Johnson. The Government House Guard waited to prime and load, then joined their drunken comrades, and the house was surrounded. The rest is a matter of common history. Prominence has purposely been given to the foregoing picture of Sydney, in order, if possible, to place before the reader some idea of what changes had taken place since Philip left it, practically a city of great distances and but little else. In 1809 Macquarie had arrived, and as we have seen, took to the work of improving and
Starting point is 00:30:21 extending Sydney with a ready and willing mind. Gross and Hunter had done little in this way, lacking opportunity and time. The former was only in office two years, and Hunter had his hands too full with the squabblings of the New South Wales Corps to admit of leisure for much else. his term of office though was notable for one happening that is the first civil action of any magnitude was tried in sydney the facts are worth stating a soldier of the new south wales corps shot a hog belonging to a mr boston for trespass the owner of the hog used abusive language to the soldier at the instance so boston alleged of two of his officers the soldier beat him with a musket for this boston claimed five hundred pound damages. The trial lasted two days and the court, a military one,
Starting point is 00:31:15 gave a verdict against two of the defendants with damages 20 shillings each. The governor on appeal confirmed the verdict. Thus, as a contemporary writer gleefully observes, though it was sought to make the government a sort of military despotism, yet the seeds of civil freedom were sown and would in due season bud and blossom.
Starting point is 00:31:37 A prediction, as we who now read can amorting, testify, thoroughly borne out. Let us now see what Macquarie thought of his charge. He writes in his first dispatch. I found the colony barely emerging from infantile invasility, suffering from various privations and disabilities, the country impenetrable beyond 40 miles from Sydney, agriculture in a yet languishing state,
Starting point is 00:32:04 commerce in its early dawn, revenue unknown, threatened with famine, distracted by faction, The public buildings in a state of dilapidation, the few roads and bridges almost impassable, the population in general depressed by poverty, no credit, public or private, the morals of the great mass of the population in the lowest state of debasement, and religious worship almost entirely neglected.
Starting point is 00:32:32 Truly a terrible indictment of this to draw up against any people, and though it was probably in great measure true, there is all the more credit due to our ancestors for having survived such a state of things and made us what we are. Nor must it be imagined that for all the pessimistic declaration just quoted, the lieges were entirely
Starting point is 00:32:52 without their pleasures and recreations. There was, for instance, racing in Hyde Park, lasting three days, and conducted after the new market fashion, followed by an ordinary and two balls. The principal prize was a ladies' cup presented to the winner by Mrs Macquarie. The Subscribers Ball, says the New South Wales Gazette,
Starting point is 00:33:14 took place on Tuesday and Thursday night, and was honoured by the presence of his excellency, the Governor and His Lady, his honour the Lieutenant Governor and His Lady, the Judge Advocate and Lady, the magistrates and other officers, civil and military, and all the beauty and fashion of the colony. A supper followed the ball.
Starting point is 00:33:34 After the cloth was removed, the rosy deity asserted his pre-eminence, and with the zealous aid of Momus and Apollo, chased pale Cynthia down into the Western world. The blazing orb of day announced his near approach, and the god of the chariot reluctantly forsook his company, Bacch dropped his head. Momas could no longer animate.
Starting point is 00:33:58 All of which, put in modern phrase, means simply a very wet night indeed, and no one with much less than three bottles under his belt at daylight. In the earlier days of the colony, Divine Service was performed in the open air, soon after sunrise, and under the most shady trees procurable. In 1793, a temporary church had been built at the back of the huts on the eastern side of the cove, near the corner of what are now Hunter and Castleray streets. It was erected at the sole expense of Reverend Mr. Johnson, already mentioned, of strong posts, wottles and plaster, and thus injurrected.
Starting point is 00:34:37 the distinction of being the first Christian church in Australasia. In 1798 it was burnt down. Then the brick store built in the premier year of the colony was utilised as a church. The same store, which appears to have been the very first house in the colony worthy of the name, stood a little beside the site of the present bank of Australasia. The first part of old St. Phillips, since replaced by the present fine Gothic structure, To be built was the clock tower. This was finished in 1797, but in 1806 it fell down.
Starting point is 00:35:14 Formerly of brick, it was rebuilt of stone the same year. The church itself was begun in 1800, but not until nine years later did the Reverend W. Cooper officiate therein for the first time. It was finished about a year afterwards, and a handsome altar service of solid silver was presented to it by His Majesty King George III. St. Phillips was consecrated by the Reverend Samuel Marsden, a gentleman of varied attainments and pursuits. On the last Sunday in December, 1809,
Starting point is 00:35:47 Lachlan Macquarie, not long landed, attended service at the new church. Marsden, of whom the early chronicles have much to say, was, in addition to a clergyman, a magistrate, landowner and stockbreeder. Thus, in the very next number of the Gazette, to the one announcing the consecration of St. Philip's, appears his name in conjunction with two other settlers,
Starting point is 00:36:12 offering a reward of one pound sterling or a gallon of spirits for all skins of native dogs. And now, 90 years later, we are still offering from one pound to five pound for dingo scalps. With the advent of Macquarie, Sydney began to shuffle off something of the squalor and dinginess of those earlier days at which we have glanced. We have seen Philip living in his four-room tent, then later in the hut dignified by the name of government's house
Starting point is 00:36:42 and surrounded by tenements, to which even it was a palace. We have seen the little settlements born in much travail to the accompaniments of hunger and hardships of every description and the clanking of chains. The miseries alike of bond and free throughout the desperate struggle for existence during years that might well have depressed the stoutest hearts, dismayed the most sanguine souls. Then came the twelve years of Macquarie's blended rule
Starting point is 00:37:12 of despotism and benevolence, clear views and narrow, stubborn ones. You have read his first dispatch sent home when the first appalling impression of Sydney and its surroundings were hot upon him. Now read what posterity has to say of him. He found New South Wales a jail and he left it a colony.
Starting point is 00:37:33 He found Sydney a village, and he left it a city. He found a population of idle prisoners, porpoise and paid officials, and he left a large free community, thriving in the produce of flocks and the labour of convicts. To Macquarie's work as a builder, there will be much occasion to refer. End of Chapter 2 Chapter 3 of the City of Sydney by John Arthur Barry.
Starting point is 00:38:06 This Librivox recording is in the public. domain. The Harbour, Macquarie's Buildings. Fine a harbour as Port Jackson was, the early days, as may be supposed, saw few opportunities for the use of it as such. The coming's and goings of ships were confined to those of a few transports with convicts and of provision vessels at long intervals from England or the Cape. Later trade was opened with the East Indies and with the United States. Passages were of great length. For instance, one ship, the series, took nearly six months to come out. A curious incident happened on the trip. Touching at Amsterdam Island, she took off four men, two English and two French,
Starting point is 00:38:54 who had apparently been marooned from a brig called the Amelia. For no less three years, had these unfortunates lived in that desolate spot, subsisting mostly on seal flesh. About 1794, a little trade with India begins, for we read that, the snow experiment from Bengal and the sloop, Otto, from North America, anchored in the cove,
Starting point is 00:39:19 the last named five months and three days out from Boston. Trust Jonathan to discover a chance for trade, no matter how distant the scene of operations. His notions, too, we may be very sure, were welcome enough to the citizens, and his bargains profitable to himself. As time passed, however,
Starting point is 00:39:39 the duties of the signalmen at South Head became less and less of a sinecure, and on occasions there was almost what might be called a rush of ships. Many of these overseer arrivals had curious stories to relate, some of the weather, others of their cargoes. Amongst the last, Mr Michael Hogan, who brought the Marquist Cornwallis from Ireland, with 233 male and female convicts of that country, seems to have had a very rough experience.
Starting point is 00:40:09 "'We understand,' says the report, "'from Mr. Hogan, "'that there had been a conspiracy to take the ship from him. "'This was, however, happily defeated. "'Nevertheless, the commander felt it his duty "'to punish many of the ringleaders very severely. "'In fact, when they arrived in Sydney, "'they were carried from the ship to the hospital.
Starting point is 00:40:31 "'That is all, "'but reading between the lines one can imagine "'un pleasant things. "'Enboldened, perhaps, by the crews of the experience, a sister snow, the Susan, presently arrived, 231 days from Rhode Island. She took her time and touched nowhere. She was laden with spirits, broadcloth,
Starting point is 00:40:53 and a variety of useful articles, a desperately long and lonely journey for a small vessel of, likely enough, not 300 tons. One vessel, the Britannia, in these years, 1794 to 1798, is constantly mentioned as bringing stores and large, livestock to the infant colony from Calcutta, Madras and Cape Town. Perhaps she may be looked upon as entitled to the distinction of the first regular trader to
Starting point is 00:41:22 Sydney. Of course we had nothing much to export as yet, nor was our first shipment when we did imagine we had found something worth sending away, much of a success. Somebody, it appears, had made a big lot of grindstones out of the coarser sort of freestone. These were sent to the Isle of France and deposited there with an agent for disposal. But one morning, a slave, rushing into his master's room, exclaimed, Massa, Massa, oh my God, grindstone all run away. It had rained in tropical fashion during the night and demolished the stack of Australian grindstones,
Starting point is 00:42:01 floating some of them out to the yard and about the streets, and washing the more porous ones into mere sand. This story is, however, probably apocryphal, But although these sporadic exits and entrances of wandering ships made Sydney, even in those far-off days, a port, journalistic recognition of the fact did not come until the printing of the first newspaper in 1803. In it, notices hereby given that the ship, Castle of Good Hope,
Starting point is 00:42:34 will positively sail for India on Sunday the 13th current, and Captain McCaskill request that all claims may be given into him, by the tenth. Then again the editor, to make the most of his one ship, expatiates as follows. The Castle of Good Hope is the largest ship that has ever entered this port, and measures about 1,000 tonnes. During the passage she lost 12 cows and one horse, fell in with no other vessel, and met with no accident. Her passing through Bass's Straits, instead of going round Van Demon's land, considerably shortened her passage and saved by, many cows. In a day or two, however, the paper is unable to chronicle the arrival of
Starting point is 00:43:18 a whaler, the Greenwich, with 1,700 tonnes of spermaceti oil, procured mostly off the north-east coast of New Zealand. And ever as the months pass, so does shipnews require more space for both deep sea and coasting, the latter under the title Boats. came in from the Hawkesbury on Sunday last, the 19th instant, the William and Mary, W. Miller, owner, laden with wheat, and so on and so on. Deep Sea ships lay at anchor in the cove, the small fry came up to the Sydney Wharf. On Sunday morning last, came five boats from Kissing Point with fruit, poultry, vegetables and potatoes. Whalers seem to have put in pretty regularly to refit and revictual, heaving down,
Starting point is 00:44:08 on some soft spot on the shores of the cove for corking of seams and patching of copper after the long cruise. In the 30s, whaling became a very flourishing industry indeed, attracting many men and ships from England and Scotland. But we shall have occasion to glance now and again at the state of the port during the progress of this chronicle. On February 15, 1811, the second year of the reign of Macquarie was born the first Australian by an Australian mother. His name was Arthur Devlin, his birthplace Liverpool, on the banks of George's River, on the County of Cumberland, New South Wales.
Starting point is 00:44:49 His subsequent career is of interest from his having been one of the first whaleboats crew which claimed the championship of the colony. His companions were James and George Chapman, William Howard, Andrew Melville and George Mulhall. The first race took place in the first race took place 1830 and was from Dawes Battery round Shark Island and back to the starting place. At that time the port was full of whalers,
Starting point is 00:45:15 had competition was therefore keen, but these six young Australians, all standing over six feet, were too much for any of the other boats and won easily. Early in 1895, a contractor working on a piece of vacant ground in North Sydney used as a market garden 20 years ago, on earth three tombstones, and to these stones hangs a story that is part of the story of our city, and must be here briefly told. The inscriptions then, on these tombstones,
Starting point is 00:45:47 commemorated the deaths of the surgeon, the chief officer, and the master of the ship's ship's ship's first passage to Sydney, a very terrible one indeed. Early in the month of July 1814, the ship Brexhornbury, while off Sholehaven, fell in with a big vessel lying to, her sails in confusion and signals of distress flying. She proved to be the Surrey transport from Spitzhead
Starting point is 00:46:14 with 200 male and 139 female convicts on board. There was also a detachment of 25 soldiers. Contagious fever had broken out on board not only among the convicts but also among the officers and crew. The captain informed the master of the Brexhambury that 28 of the male convicts, two soldiers, the chief officer and two seamen had died, that he and the remainder of his officers and crew were still suffering, and he implored help to take his fever-stricken ship into Port Jackson.
Starting point is 00:46:49 Naturally, there was no disposition to eagerly board the Surrey, and the boat's crew lay on their oars, and doubtfully surveyed the floating pest-house, and the scared and diseased-marked faces that peered wistfully over her bullocks. At length a man, turning to the captain of the Brexhornbury, said, I can navigate, I'll go on board and take her in. This unknown hero did so, and he brought the Surrey to Sydney with her captain, Patterson, Dying, and the other officer little better.
Starting point is 00:47:21 Most unfortunately there is no mention of that man's name. It was worthy of mention. The Surrey got into port on July 27th, and was anchored in a convenient position near the north shore. But not until April 31st was the camp in which her people had lived in tents, broken up, and the ship brought round to the cove. This old Surrey, S-U-R-R-E-Y, or, as the early records call her the Surrey, S-U-R-R-R-Y, was one of the oldest traders, or rather transports to Sydney,
Starting point is 00:47:55 making between 1814 and 1840 no less than 18-Voyages, and she must have been almost identified with and looked upon by the time. citizens as part of their history. The tombstones it may be mentioned did not distinguish the site of the burial, but were merely memorials placed there by sorrowing friends and shipmates at a much later period. Of interest, as showing at what an early age men in those days reached positions of sea responsibility, it is recorded that Captain Patterson and Surgeon Brooks were only 24 years old, while Chief Officer Crawford was but 28. Where the the last resting places of the captain and the surgeon were really situated, there seems no evidence.
Starting point is 00:48:42 The chief officer was probably buried at sea. During the 12 years of Macquarie's rule, he made roads, erected public buildings, and constantly travelled about the colony, distributing grants to deserving settlers, planning townships and pardoning industrious prisoners. Fifteen months after the discovery of the long sought-for passage across the Blue Mountains, by Wentworth Lawson and Blacksland, the governor had, by placing nearly every convict in the colony at the work, formed a good road to the western plains, and along this he presently, accompanied by his wife and suite,
Starting point is 00:49:21 journeyed and founded the town of Bathurst. But Sydney was the chief centre of this indefatigable man's exertions, and he did nothing by halves. For instance, seeing that the old markets, close to the wharf, were most unsuitable for the purpose, he issued a proclamation that he intended to at once remove them, to that piece of open ground,
Starting point is 00:49:46 part of which was lately used by Messrs Blacksland as a stockyard, bounded by George Street on the east, York Street on the west, Market Street on the north, and the burying ground on the south, and henceforth to be called Market Square. If the shade of Macquarie ever revisits Sydney,
Starting point is 00:50:04 what one wonders does it think of the great power, that now stands on part of the same ground. Does it envy the questionable achievement and feel regret at not having been able to stand sponsor for yet another Macquarie effort, for he too often built well but not wisely? Presently he erected a wharf at Cockle Bay, now Darling Harbour,
Starting point is 00:50:28 for the reception of seabone goods, and more particularly grain and corn, and there have been wharves on that spot ever since for that especial purpose. He it was, too, who built a market house, surrounded by a couple at Atlanton, and with a front portico supported by Grecian pillars. Many of us remember this imposing structure as the late central police court, dingy, dirty and quite unfitted for such business.
Starting point is 00:50:57 But in those days, it was deemed a really superb building. Years ago, in the time of Governor Hunter, a half-moon battery had been erected by the ship's company of the supply, and armed with some of the tenders guns. This promontory was then called Point Benelong, from the fact that, on the site of the battery now known to us as Fort Macquarie, Governor Philip had built a house for Benelong, the native who accompanied him to England,
Starting point is 00:51:25 and afterwards returned with Hunter. In a plan of Sydney presented by the Honourable P.G. King to the Legislative Council, dated 1820, Fort Macquarie is shown, but mentioned as carrying 16 guns. in that year the point on which it stood was separated by a narrow stream from the mainland and it was necessary to cross a drawbridge before entering the fort later on the moats was filled in some land reclaimed from the sea and an outer wall built Little, however, seems to be known of its history, because the earlier governors devoted more attention to fortifying Dawes Point and the fort, named after Philip, which occupied the site of the present observatory. This defence commanded the harbour, and with the battery on George's head, erected in 1803, and the one on Old Benning-Long Point was considered sufficient for the defence of Sydney. probably the ever-restless Macquarie took the old fort in hand and did something for it,
Starting point is 00:52:28 besides endowing it with his own patronymic. It is of interest to remember that at the time of the Crimean War, this battery was provided with additional guns. During the latter end of 1870, it was strengthened by the addition of 542-pounders. The last occasion upon which it was used was in March 1871, when the guns were manned by 50 men and the fort took a share in the spectacle known as the defence of Sydney.
Starting point is 00:52:57 It has now totally disappeared to make room for a nondescript land of castellated barn intended to serve as a tram terminus. In triumphs of grotesque on coothness, the architects of Macquarries and those of our own time seem thoroughly at one. No less indefatigable as a former of streets
Starting point is 00:53:18 than as a builder did Macquarie prove himself. Already it has been told how he cut George Street out of a thick scrub between the markets and the cove, cleared and named many others, and by his exertions did much towards making the city out of the village. It must be remembered, however, that unlike his less fortunate predecessors,
Starting point is 00:53:41 he had the British treasury at his back and unlimited muscle at instant command. Plenty of land he also had to give away and that he was liberal with it, the story of Burwood House amply proves. Mr Alexander Riley was an enterprising gentleman, who wishing to go in for scientific farming on a large scale, applied for, and received a grant of no less than 1,000 acres, extending from Parramatta to the Liverpool Road,
Starting point is 00:54:10 and embracing much of the present boroughs of Croydon, Burwood and Strathfield. Here, with the aid of a small army of assigned servants, he fenced the whole of the estate, cleared half, subdivided it into paddocks, and laid down English grasses, besides building Burwood House. At this day, the ancient mansion presents much the same appearance as it did in 1820, and its preservation speaks well for the endurance of the native timbers, and the excellence of early workmanship. Of course, as time passed, it was bit by bit shorn of its surrounding grounds,
Starting point is 00:54:47 and the last we hear of it was when in 1885 Mrs Hardie and Gorman sold the house with 200-foot frontage to Burwood Park Road for £3,550. Let us hope that whoever owns the 80-year-old house we'll deal gently with it and not pull it down to build suburban red brick villas on its site. We have seen the building of the first permanent church,
Starting point is 00:55:15 old St. Phillips. now in 1819 was laid the foundation stone of the second St James says an old writer the spire surmounting the brick tower at the west end not only takes away from the heaviness of the edifice but also forms a conspicuous object from every part of the city and its neighbourhood this spire it may be remembered was renovated some years ago and the interior of the building materially enlarged Still, in all essentials, the church remains as it was in the days of Macquarie.
Starting point is 00:55:52 In the same year was finished and occupied the Hyde Park barracks, used as the principal convict depot of the colony. All these prisoners on their arrival were forwarded here and after being duly registered were open for assignment to the free inhabitants as servants. The Supreme Court was begun in 1820 but not completed for another eight years. Three years previously had arrived our first judge, Mr Baronfield. Also an auxiliary Bible society had been established. There was a free school, prisons, churches and a race course,
Starting point is 00:56:29 but there were as yet no free press and no trial by jury to complete the civilising of the city. Before leaving Macquarie and his works in stone and mortar, reference must be made to one of them, if only for the curious means by which he got it built, and the curious means the builders took of paying themselves. The then colonial architect had been told to prepare plans for a general hospital. This he did, but on such a costly and lavish scale,
Starting point is 00:56:59 a centre building and two detached wings to be erected of cut stone with a covered portico completely surrounding each of the three piles, that Macquarie, although sorely tempted, considered the expense doubtfully and for a while hung back, but only for a while, and presently he made an agreement with three well-known citizens by which these gentlemen contracted to erect the building in its entirety, on condition of receiving a certain quantity of rum from the king's store, and of having the sole right to purchase, and to land free of duty,
Starting point is 00:57:34 all the ardent spirits that should be imported into the colony during a certain term of years. The rum hospital, as it was called at the time, was eventually completed in accordance with these conditions. The wages of those so employed were, as was usual in those days, paid for half in cash and half in property, that is, in tea, sugar, ardent spirits, wine, clothing, etc., are any other article the contractors happen to have in their store, and which, of course, was charged to the labourer at an enormous percentage above its true value.
Starting point is 00:58:09 And to make a clean sweep, the contractors erected, public houses in the vicinity of the works, at which the emancipist and convict labourers might spend their wages. Says Dr. Lang, in the year 1824, the rum hospital was calculated to be worth £20,000. I am confident that a good building could now, 1834, be erected for £10,000. The quantity of Bengal rum received by the contractors were 60,000 gallons, worth at that time the whole estimated cost of the building. The monopoly was for three years, afterwards extended to three and a half years, and as the contractors could purchase spirits at three shillings a gallon and retail them at 40, the right
Starting point is 00:58:56 was supposed to be at least £100,000. And in this extraordinary fashion did Sydney get her first general hospital. Surely never any charitable institution founded under such, to say the least of it, disreputable circumstances. Still, though Macquarie's contemporaries raged bitterly against him doubtless, out of the evil that attended its birth came eventually much good and comfort to the suffering. It served its purpose, even as does the beautiful building that now stands on the site of the Rum Hospital, a portion of which, the southern wing, still remains with us in the shape of the mint. End of Chapter 3.
Starting point is 00:59:42 Chapter 4 of the City of Sydney by John Arthur Barry This Librivox recording is in the public domain Early Social Life Writing of Sydney in about 1821 to 1822 A visitor remarks This town covers a considerable extent of ground And would at first sight induce the belief
Starting point is 01:00:12 of a much greater population than it actually contains This is attributable to two circumstances the largeness of the leases, which in most instances possess sufficient space for a garden, and the smallness of the houses erected on them, which in general do not exceed one story. From these two causes it happens that the town does not contain above 7,000 souls. There are in the whole upwards of a thousand houses, and although they are for the most part small and of mean appearance, there are many public buildings, as well as houses of individuals,
Starting point is 01:00:49 that would not disgrace this great metropolis, London. Of the former class, the General Hospital and the barracks are perhaps the most conspicuous. Of the latter are the houses of Messrs Lord, Riley, Howe, Underwood and Nichols. Land in this town, the writer goes on to say, is in many places worth £1,000 per acre, and is daily increasing in value. Rents are in consequence exorbitantly high. It is very far from being a commodious house
Starting point is 01:01:21 that can be had for a hundred a year unfurnished. He visited the market, already described, and was rather pleased with it, finding it well supplied with grain, vegetables, poultry, butter, eggs and fruit. It was held on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. The Bank of New South Wales, he thinks, promises to be of great and permanent benefit to the colony in general.
Starting point is 01:01:47 Its capital at that time was £20,000, divided into 200 shares, and its paper was now the circulating medium of the colony. Education was spreading, and the schoolmaster was going comparatively far afield. There are in this town, says the historian of these early twenties, and other parts of the colony, several good private seminaries for the bull. board and education of the children of opulent parents. The best is in the district of Castleray, which is about 40 miles distant, and is kept by the clergyman of that district, the Reverend Henry Fulton, a person peculiarly qualified from his character and acquirements
Starting point is 01:02:29 for conducting so responsible and important and undertaking. The boys in this seminary receive a regular classical education, and the terms are as reasonable as those of similar establishments in this country, England. Compare this seminary business with the first school, already mentioned, of the Reverend Mr. Johnson, and it will be acknowledged that we were making rapid advances indeed.
Starting point is 01:02:56 Here, bearing on the same subject is an extract from the Sydney Gazette of the day. Sydney Academy, number 93, Philip Street, wanted, a drawing and a dancing master, persons properly qualified, and who give satisfactory testimonials as to character and abilities will meet with liberal encouragement by applying as above, likewise wanted a good lawn dress. And also, boarding and day school for young ladies by Mrs Hickey, Bent Street, Sydney, opened for a limited number, where they will be
Starting point is 01:03:29 instructed in English grammar, writing geography and the French language. Terms, under 10 years, board and tuition, including English grammar and plain work, but annum, £20 pound. Then for the opposite sex. To parents, guardians, etc. Mr Cuff begs leave respectfully to acquaint his friends and the public that he has removed his day and evening schools from his late residence in Pitt Street to Macquarie Street, where every attention is paid to the education of youth in all its branches by himself and able assistance. Terms as usual. M.B. A Sunday school will be spiritually and morally attended to. all this sounds very fine but it must be kept in mind that the city proper was as yet scarcely more than a collection of huts with dotted amongst them the comparatively huge buildings of macquarie's regime
Starting point is 01:04:25 that the waters of the cove still washed up to where the paragon hotel now stands and that the gallows upon which men were hung in batches was a prominent feature of the city the first place of execution by the way was as nearly as can be gathered near hyde paris not far from where St James's Church now stands. But although accounts differ in this matter, it seems pretty certain that the site of the original gallows afterwards formed part of a garden, taking in the ground upon which is erected the Supreme Court, and probably this garden ran up to the corner of our King Street. However this may be, the gallows in 1804 began a series of journeys.
Starting point is 01:05:10 Close to the corner of Park and Castleray streets, occupied in 1848, as it is now, by the Barlimo Hotel. Thence it was taken to some part of Sussex Street, where, in the same year, stood Barker's Mills. Then it was moved to a piece of ground near Strawberry Hills, then to the back of the military barracks. From there, in the beginning of the Twenties, this much-travelled machine found a resting place
Starting point is 01:05:35 on the summit of a cliff in Prince's Street at the rear of the jail in Lower George Street. its final journey was to the front of the new jail at Darlinghurst, where it performed its first duty on two men convicted of murder in October 1841. Innumerable arguments have taken place about this matter of the precise situation of the original gibbet, but by what can be learnt from careful research, the above is as nearly as possible its early history. A dominating feature of the Sydney landscape, to which reference has already been, been made was the windmills crowning some of the most prominent heights and forming, as will
Starting point is 01:06:17 be seen in the old prince, a not un-pictureesque element in the scene. Steam, for the purpose of grinding corn, was not utilised until about 1828. Says the Gazette of 1819, Mr John Blacksland begs leave to inform the public that he has erected a mill for the grinding of grain, the stones of which are the production of the colony and that he will grind wheat at one shilling per bushel. Any person found taking stones from his Luddenham estate will be prosecuted. The last intimation shows that the editor of the Gazette had to suffer imposition as well as his modern prototypes, its being to all intents and purposes a separate advertisement. But then Mr Blacksland was a person of weight in the community, whilst the poor newspaper man of
Starting point is 01:07:10 those days had to tramp round the country for many miles and in all weathers, humbly soliciting payments of two and even three years overdue subscriptions. Although the readers of this book should be able to form for themselves, aided by the pictures, a fairly accurate idea of Sydney at the various ages of its growth already touched upon, yet to give effect to these, something must be said of the men and women or forebears, who had their being and lived their lives under so much less
Starting point is 01:07:41 happier auspices than do we the present day. But contemporary historians have not given us in this respect very much to go upon. Their time was too greatly taken up by chronicling political squabbles and the gradual expansion of the colony outside the capital to afford any leisure for more than a glimpse now and again into the social life of Sydney itself. Says an early visitor, writing just about the advent of Governor Brisbane, society is upon a much better footing throughout the colony in general that might naturally be imagined, considering the ingredients of which it is composed. In Sydney, the civil and military officers with their families form a circle at once select and extended, without including the highly numerous respectable families of merchants and settlers who reside
Starting point is 01:08:34 there. Unfortunately, however, the town is not free from those divisions which are so prevalent in all small communities. Scandal appears to be the favourite amusement to which idlers resort to kill time and prevent ennui, and consequently the same families are eternally changing from friendship to hostility, and from hostility back again to friendship. These conditions it may be remarked, will still hold good at present, of many other towns besides Sydney some 80 years ago. Continues our author, of the number of respectable persons, some estimates may be formed if we refer to the parties which are given on particular days at the government's house. Even now, many people gauge respectability by much the same
Starting point is 01:09:22 test, and notice that word respectable. It occurs throughout the old chronicles and is pregnant with meaning. To be respectable in those days was apparently to be pure merino, with no taint even of the emancipist, let alone of the actual convict about you, and that such spotless ones among the flock were very far from being numerous, is shown by the fact that at one of these Government House festivals in 1822 there were about 160 respectable ladies and gentlemen. Writing a year or two later, the author, already quoted above, remarks rather significantly. There are its presence no public amusements in this colony. Many years since there was a theatre and a more latterly annual races, but it was found that
Starting point is 01:10:12 the society was not sufficiently mature for such establishments. Reading here between the lines, one seems to have unpleasant visions of what our early general public was like. Later on, as we shall see, they matured and presumably improved. From all that can be gathered, and this is but little, our folk of the early years led lives that, if busy, were nonetheless monotonous, void of social amusements, except perhaps, at long intervals, a supper and of all at Government House or some public celebration like that of the Anniversary Dinner. Of their home life there has been no word painter and of it we know little or nothing.
Starting point is 01:10:56 This function, the Anniversary Dinner, merits rather more than passing notice. The first one on record seems to have been on January the 26th, 1817, and was held by Isaac Nichols, postmaster of Sydney at his house in Lower George Street, at the head of the cove to celebrate the 29th anniversary of the foundation of the colony. There are 40 selects and presumably thoroughly respectable
Starting point is 01:11:22 guests who sit down to table at 5 in the afternoon and retire at 10 that night. There are loyal toasts proposed after the cloth is removed and the muse of Mr Jenkins who is the chairman has composed a song which is sung
Starting point is 01:11:38 to the tune of Rule Britannia. A verse or so will suffice. to give the reader an idea of this, undoubtedly the First Australian patriotic song. When First Australia rose to fame, and seamen brave explored her shore, Neptune with joy beheld their aim, and thus expressed the wish he bore.
Starting point is 01:12:01 Rise, Australia, with peace and plenty crowned, thy name shall one day be renowned. Then commerce too shall on thee smile, adventurous barks, thy port shall, shall crowd, while pleased, well pleased the parent isle, shall of her distant sons be proud. Rise, Australia, with peace and plenty crowned, thy name shall one day be renowned. And who shall say that Mr. Jenkins did not make a very fine forecast indeed, and one fulfilled to the very letter?
Starting point is 01:12:37 Next year the celebration became official, taking place at Government's House, while the next evening Mrs Macquarie gave a ball. Mr Howe, the editor of the Gazette, was graciously allowed the privilege of a look round during the evening. Not being respectable, that of course was as much as he could expect, and he appears to have been very much taken with a portrait of Admiral Philip, which was suspended at one end of the room, encircled with wreaths and banners, and an inscription running,
Starting point is 01:13:07 in commemoration of the 30th anniversary of the colony of New South Wales, established by Arthur Philip, whose virtues and talent entitle him to the great full remembrance of this country, and to whose arduous exertions the present prosperous state of the colony may chiefly be ascribed, which goes to show
Starting point is 01:13:26 that contemporary recognition of the first Australian pioneer was stronger than that of succeeding generations, and indeed, until quite recently, in our own day. The artist was a Mr. Greenaway, the colonial architect, it would be of interest to know if that old portrait is still in existence. The 32nd anniversary, 1820, was celebrated by a public dinner at Hankinson's rooms in George
Starting point is 01:13:55 Street, which was attended by 60 or 70 respectable persons. But on this occasion there was no enthusiasm to speak of owing to the facts of the guests being overcharged. The tickets for the dinner cost 40 shillings, without any kind of refined articles such as jellies, or blamonges, and the elegance of a tip-top tavern table, such as could be had in London for a quarter of the money. Some of these good people had probably been glad enough in the starvation years of a feed of hominy, and now they are growling because mine host had not provided blemanges and jellies. And by the way, it is remarkable that now we find this function left chiefly to the emancipus, who apparently have been admitted to call themselves respectable.
Starting point is 01:14:42 This was of course Macquarie's doing, but only a month or two after landing, he had shown very clearly where his sympathies lay by making a convict a magistrate. Certainly, the person in question had been transported for some petty offence at the age of 16, but the affair nevertheless gave a tremendous shock to the untainted members of the community. In 1821, the 33rd anniversary was perhaps the most successful of any so far. It took place at Gansdell's rooms Hyde Park, when 101 emancipus sat down to a great spread. Dr Redfern was president,
Starting point is 01:15:23 Simeon Lorde was vice-president, and there were eight stewards. It is particularly noted by the chronicler of the affair that both dinner and wines were excellent. Succeeding celebrations all partook of the same non-political and partially representative character, until 1825, of which more anon.
Starting point is 01:15:48 Major General Sir Thomas Brisbane, KCB, was now Governor of New South Wales, the second of our military governors. For the city, in the way of adding to or beautifying it, Brisbane did little or nothing. Indeed, during the whole of his four years' stay, he was more or less in hot water. In the first place, he, with a stroke of his pen,
Starting point is 01:16:13 altered the financial policy of the colony, and with such disastrous results that wheat rose to one pound per bushel. Wheat, when he arrived, was practically the currency of the country and was exchangeable at the government's store for vouchers representing an average rate of 10 shillings per bushel. These receipts were as good as cash in Sydney. Brisbane suddenly changed this circulating medium from sterling to colonial currency
Starting point is 01:16:41 with the result of raising the pound sterling 25% above the pound currency. The effect on the small farmers, already many of them deeply in debt to Sydney merchants, may be imagined. Before this, however, he had fallen out with the Scotch Presbyterians, and this was the more curious, inasmuch as Brisbane was himself a Scot and a Presbyterian to boot. Dr. Lang arrived in 1823 and at once set about, getting a church built, collecting in a few days upwards of £700 for that purpose. A memorial was now addressed to the governor, praying for government monetary aid for the undertaking. To this a sharp and insulting reply was sent, refusing the wished-for help.
Starting point is 01:17:32 The committee, indignant, applied for redress to the home government, who severely reprimanded Brisbane and ordered him to advance, not one-third of the cost of the erection, but also to pay the officiating minister a salary of £300 per annum. Regretting, at the same time, that His Excellency put to their probation members of the Church of Scotland in the Colony, the established church of one of the most enlightened and virtuous portions of the empire. Thus Brisbane got his snub and the Scots their church. Later on, the governor, however, showed himself anything but a small-minded man, For, perceiving that he had been quite in the wrong, he replaced his name on the list of subscribers,
Starting point is 01:18:18 of which in anger he had caused to be taken. Nay, more, he laid the foundation stone of the church in July 1824. Such is the story of St Andrews, or, as we had this day more generally know it, the Scots Church. Standing at the south end of Church Hill, it is practically unchanged, looking as stiff, sturdy, uncompromised. and rugged as the man through whose enterprise it was built. End of Chapter 4. Chapter 5 of the City of Sydney by John Arthur Barry.
Starting point is 01:19:01 This Librivox recording is in the public domain. Sydney in the 20s Dr Lang never forgave Brisbane for the slight put upon the Sydney Presbyterians by comparing them to their disadvantage with the Roman Catholics. Thus, when the governor instituted yearly and half, yearly races in the capital. Lang calls him the patron saint of Australian jockey ship.
Starting point is 01:19:27 The Scott Divine says bitterly, there are the Sydney and Parramatta races, there are the Windsor races and the Liverpool and the Campbelltown races. There are races at Maitland and Patrick's Plains, two different stations on Hunter's River, at Bathurst, beyond the mountains, and at Goulburn Plains, 200 miles from Sydney in the District of Argyle. In short, the March of Improvement, is much too weak a phrase for the meridian of New South Wales. We must therefore speak of the race of improvement. The three appropriate and never-failing accompaniments
Starting point is 01:20:01 of advancing civilisation in that colony are a race-course, a public house and a jail. This was unfair and unjust, but Dr. Lang was at times both. Later he wrote, When I asked what Sir Thomas Brisbane did for New South Wales, I pause in vain for a reply. when I ask what memorial he left behind him
Starting point is 01:20:24 to endear his memory to the country and to perpetuate his fame a hundred fingers point to the Brisbane Cup. But Brisbane did more than this, for he established a fine observatory at Parramatta. Also, before he left, he launched a thunderbolt at the exclusives of Sydney by actually dining with the elite of the emancipists.
Starting point is 01:20:46 During his regime, too, was, in 1824, established our first executive council, and there arrived our first chief justice, Francis Forbes, afterwards Sir Francis, Sax Bannister, the Attorney General, John Stephen, father of the late Chief Justice, Sir Alfred Stephen, as Solicitor General and Commissioner of the Court of Requests, John McNess as Sheriff, and T.E. Miller as registrar.
Starting point is 01:21:15 The first trial by jury was then panelled in a civil cause in February 25, Noteworthy too was the establishment of the first independent newspaper, the Australian, which was published by Messrs Wardle and Wentworth. It will thus be seen that if, during this period, there was little increase in the growth of the city, there were a good many events of importance that were most intimately connected with its present welfare and its future history.
Starting point is 01:21:46 Recurring to the establishment by the governor of the periodical race meetings, so contemned by Lang. It may be of interest to know how the boundaries of the old-time course ran. The grandstand then, in 1821, and the winning post stood at the top of what is now Market Street. The course took a sweep to the right in the direction of Hyde Park barracks,
Starting point is 01:22:09 thence passed the site of St. Mary's Cathedral and the Sydney Grammar School, passing in front of Lyons Terrace, obliquely to the top of Bathurst Street, then along what is now Elizabeth Street, to the corner of Park Street, and thence to the winning post. When first formed,
Starting point is 01:22:28 the length of the course was one mile and a quarter, but it was afterwards shortened to a mile and six yards. The first race took place about 1810, when the 73rd regiment arrived under command of Lieutenant Colonel Morris O'Connell, the late Sir Morris O'Connell, and the first prize was won by a horse named Chance, the property of Captain Ritchie, the Colonel's Mayor, Carlo, won the second,
Starting point is 01:22:54 and one belonging to Darcy Wentworth the third. But shortly after Governor Brisbane's arrival, houses began to spring up so quickly around this quarter that the course was removed to what was known as the Sandy Racecourse, about four miles to the southwards, towards Botany Bay. One curious event of 1824 was the seizing of a vessel, while at anchor in Sydney Cove by a king's ship, acting on behalf of the East India Company.
Starting point is 01:23:25 This company it appeared, claimed the exclusive right of trading in eastern waters. Now the colonial government had chartered a ship, the Almora, and had sent her to Batavia when she returned with a valuable cargo of rice, tea, sugar, etc. Presently, some of the Sydney merchants,
Starting point is 01:23:44 jealous of official meddling with their prerogatives as traders and importers, laid an information against the Almora with the captain of an English man of war, then lying in the harbour, and she was seized in open defiance of the government and sent off with her cargo as a prize to India on a charge of infringing the company's charter.
Starting point is 01:24:05 The mere fact it was alleged of her having tea on board was sufficient excuse for this arbitrary proceeding. Of course there had been bush rangers in the colony before Brisbane's time, but not any calling for special mention and told the Donahue gang, who flourished in 1825 and the three following years,
Starting point is 01:24:25 instituted a very reign of terror in Sydney and its immediate neighbourhood. Donahue's gang contained a dozen ruffians, but his chief companions were Wormsley, Weber and Underwood, all transported convicts except the last, who was native-born. After a time, however, his mates discovered that he had been keeping a diary
Starting point is 01:24:47 of their proceedings. Disgusted with this literary effort, they effectually stopped all chance of publication by deliberately murdering the unfortunate author. He had, so it was alleged, joined the gang from mere love of adventure. For four years these men set the police at defiance, notwithstanding that a reward of £100 was offered for the ringleaders. Between Sydney and Parramatta, they murdered and robbed and fought the police with an impunity that says little for the constitution of the force of those days. So great did the terror of the band become that travellers joined together for protection. Says a newspaper of the time, speaking of Donoghue and his depredations, some half-dozen constables or so, we believe, have been packed off up the
Starting point is 01:25:38 Parramatta and Liverpool roads, but have returned to town as usual, safe and sound and empty-handed. Some effective measures should be taken, and that's speedily to suppress this alarming evil. The dress of the three leaders has been described, and shows that they wanted for little in that respect at least. Donahue, black hat, super-fine blue cloth coat, lined with silk, surtoot fashion, plaited shirt, good quality, laced boots, and snuff-coloured trousers. He seems to have been the dandy of the trio. His two aides, however, Wormsley and Weber were almost equally well-dressed. At last the residents harassed beyond endurance, rose in their own protection, and gave battle to the Bush Rangers at Raby, now Brinjellie.
Starting point is 01:26:31 Here Donahue was shot, but most of the others managed to escape through the thick scrub. Later on, Wormsley and Weber were captured on the Western Road. Wormsley turned King's evidence against Weber, who was present. hanged. Through the informer, others of the gang were at intervals captured, and the long reign of Bold Jack Donohue and his banditti was over. But during Brisbane's official term, dozens of men seemed to have taken to the bush, and had more or less long and successful careers, ending in death by the gallows or the bullet. The Bathurst district was especially prolific of bush rangers, but compared with the Bloodthirsty Donahue gang, the majority of the
Starting point is 01:27:16 appear to have been mere station-hut robbers and petty pilferers of that kind, nor did we ever produce anything equal to the terrible Tasmanian outlaws. But whilst for robbery under arms, they most surely swung, at times a merciful judge, a simple thieving, might only send them to Norfolk Island to be worked in chains during their lives. In 1825, we first established the mounted police, drawn chiefly from the east, infantry regiment serving in Sydney. At the beginning they consisted of only two officers and 13 troopers, nor was it until 14 years later that the force could make anything like a respectable
Starting point is 01:28:00 show with nine officers, a sergeant major, and 156 non-commissioned officers and men, with 136 horses, 20 of the corps being footmen. The officers were magistrates and the body was subject to military law and discipline. They were armed with carbine sword and horse pistols and were uniformed as light dragoons. The headquarter division, consisting of the commandant, the adjutant and some score of men, was stationed in Sydney. As a service, it was an excessively rough, hard and perilous one, and not by any means so popular as it is now. The anniversary dinner of 1825 demands a special notice because of its entirely different features to those that came before it. They were merely loyal and sentimental functions.
Starting point is 01:28:53 This particular one, however, was in the highest degree political as well. The chair was taken by an eloquent young Australian who had just returned from a visit to England, full of wide and liberal ideas, eager too to give the benefit of them to his native land. His name was William Charles Wentworth, and he was the practical champion. of constitutional government, as opposed to that military despotism so familiar to his early youth. Tickets on this occasion were only $5 each. The feast was held at Mrs. Hill's tavern, Hyde Park. A military band was in attendance, and some of the tose indicate the progress that the colony was
Starting point is 01:29:35 making towards reform and freedom. To the memory of Governor Philip, the founder of the colony, the memory of Major General Macquarie, our late revered and lamented governor. They were also toasted Sir James McIntosh and the other advocates of Australia in the British Senate, trial by jury, the freedom of the press, a house of assembly. The vice-president was Dr Redfern, and amongst the stewards was Robert Campbell, son of the first real Sydney businessman, known even to this day as Merchant Campbell. architecturally, except in the matter of private houses, Sydney during Brisbane's term, as has been remarked,
Starting point is 01:30:18 had little more to show than when Macquarie left. A governor who should have been buried in the centre of the city with one word, circumspecies, cut for an epitaph on his tomb. Still, the political and social happenings of Brisbane's years, few though they were, had more effect on the future of the capital and the colony than all the building of Macquarie, and are so bound up in the early history of our city as to render ignoring any notice of them, however slight, impossible.
Starting point is 01:30:50 Between Governor Brisbane's relinquishing the rule of the colony and the arrival of his successor, another military man, Lieutenant-General Sir Ralph Darling, KCB. There was only an interregnum of 18 days, during which the administration was in the hands of Colonel, afterwards General, Stuart of Bathurst, an honour which formed the one boast of that officer's existence and the standing joke of the district during the remainder of his life.
Starting point is 01:31:18 One of the chief advantages gained by Sydney and the colony during Darling's reign seems to have been the establishment of a general post office, and for this purpose he set aside the piece of land in George Street, then occupied by a police station. The quarters of the force were removed to the market house, old central police station, while sheds for market purposes were erected at its rear. Readers will remember mention of Mr Isaac Nichols, postmaster of Sydney,
Starting point is 01:31:49 in whose house took place the first recorded anniversary dinner. Well, this is the person who is said to have built the first post office in our city, using it at the same time as a residence. The house was only pulled down about 11 or 12 years ago, and it was situated in Lower George Street, near the Queen's Wharf, Circular Key. It was numbered 144.
Starting point is 01:32:12 behind it in those days was a store and directly in front of this was a wharf on the banks of the tank stream at which small coasters used to discharge goods the house supposed to have been built about 1800 was substantially constructed of brick made probably in the old government's brickyards when Nichols died in 1819 the post office was removed to where the present great building stands
Starting point is 01:32:40 the police who occupied its being, as already stated, established in the Market House. At his death, Nichols Post Office changed hands and became the Australia Hotel. For years prior to its being demolished, it had been occupied, like so many other houses in this the oldest quarter of Sydney by Chinese merchants. Almost opposite to the site of the original post office, there was, some years ago, a butcher's shop, once the residence of Mr Thomas Moore, superintendent of the dockyards. Further south is a structure believed to be the oldest residence in Australia.
Starting point is 01:33:20 It was built by a Mr. Cubbit at the corner of George Street and Brown Bear Lane and was of stone and two stories high. Later on it was known as the Cat and Fiddle Hotel and an additional story of brick was added. This old bit of history is now occupied by Chinese. needless to say that in Postmaster Nichols time there were no pillar boxes and no postman
Starting point is 01:33:45 people had to travel from all parts of the settlement to post or receive letters at the old house in Lower George Street and it may be remarked of this street that not only does it give us a capital idea of what that quarter of the city look like over half a century ago so little has it changed but into the bargain
Starting point is 01:34:04 is almost a perfect facsimile of scores of streets in English country towns. Our first builders were nothing if not conservative and they reproduced as nearly as possible in the new country the unsuitable conditions of architecture they had left behind in the old one. As to the new post office, it still so far as Luke's went, remained all over a police station until improved almost out of knowledge in 1847 to 8. In the second year of Sir Ralph Darling's reign, an event happened that shook Sydney society, both exclusive and otherwise, to its very foundations, and as being part of the history of the city, may be here briefly touched upon.
Starting point is 01:34:50 Suds and Thompson were two private soldiers in the 57th Regiment, doing duty in Sydney. Suds was a steady man who had saved some money. Thompson was a scamp, but both wished to remain in the colony instead of returning home with the regiment. As to procure their discharge was out of the question, Suds proposed to his mate that they should gain the coveted paper by becoming convicts. This being agreed upon, they went to a shop and stole some cloth, were, as they intended, caught and tried,
Starting point is 01:35:23 and sentenced to be transported to one of the auxiliary penal settlements for seven years. Then the governor stepped in, took the two prisoners out of the hands of the civil power, and condemn them to work in chains on the roads, for the full term of their sentence, and afterwards to be returned to service in the ranks. On a day appointed the Sydney Garrison was assembled, and formed into a hollow square.
Starting point is 01:35:49 The culprits were brought out, their uniforms stripped off, and replaced by the convict dress. Iron spiked colours and heavy chains, made expressly to the governor's orders, were riveted around their necks and to their legs, and then they were drummed out of the regiment to the tune of the Rogue's March.
Starting point is 01:36:10 Suds was in a very bad health at the time and his illness, aggravated by the disgrace and the long exposure in the hot sun, together with the utter downfall of his hopes, plunged him into such a fit of hopeless despondency that he died a few days afterwards. Thompson became insane.
Starting point is 01:36:29 Then the fun began. The Gazette defended, the Australian attacked, the conduct of the governor. sides were taken and Sydney was convulsed. Indeed, Darling may be said never to have heard the last of this extraordinary case of despotic military interference and uncalled for cruelty on his part.
Starting point is 01:36:52 In 1827, there were no less than four newspapers in Sydney, the good old Conservative Gazette, the organ of the government, the monitor, a fighter, the gleaner, and the Australian. And these three last were all arrequent. against the Gazette and the government. So so did the authorities feel about these constant attacks that they presently imposed a duty consisting of fourpence upon any sheet, half-sheet, or piece of paper,
Starting point is 01:37:21 whereof any newspaper, within the meaning of the blasphemous and seditious libels act, should consist. How, the editor of the Gazette, confident of government support, only protested mildly against this imposition, but the others fulminated to such good purpose that the act never came into force. Indeed, the Chief Justice refused to certify to its being a proper one. But for that, perhaps, the Monitor and its two contemporaries
Starting point is 01:37:51 might, after all, have had to do as they threatened and appear as magazines to evade the duty, or to suspend altogether. Bent Street owes a prominent old landmark to this era, that is, the Free Public Library, originally not. known as the Australian Library. The originator of this institution was Thomas de la Condamine, private secretary to Governor Darling,
Starting point is 01:38:15 aided by the reverence W. Cooper and Hill, and many of the most influential merchants. The first meeting was held at the Sydney Hotel when Alderman McLeigh was elected president. This was on February 3, 1826. By the judicious arrangement of the committee, aided by a liberal subscription list, donations from the Governor and from Archdeacon Scott,
Starting point is 01:38:41 together with a bequest of books from T. Campbell, the library was opened on October 1, 1827, at No. 1, Terry's Buildings, Pit Street, or somewhere about the site of Messrs, Bat, Rod and Purvis's auction rooms. These premises were held jointly with the newly established Sydney dispensary, whose officer also served as a temporary librarian from 1 to 4pm daily. Shortly afterwards, the governor granted for its use some valuable allotments of land. Two of these were situated in Hyde Park, between where now are St. Mary's Cathedral and the Sydney Grammar School.
Starting point is 01:39:21 There were also two other pieces above Rushcutter's Bay. These were sold later on in about 1841 by public auction and realised £3,384 pounds. Sir Richard Burke, however, cancelled the ground in Hyde Park, notwithstanding many protests on the part of the committee and others. Finally, Sir George Gipps granted the site of the present edifice, of which the president, Alexander MacLeay, laid the foundation stone in 1843. It took three years in building, the cost being over £5,000. Eventually it was purchased by the government, and declared free for the use of the people.
Starting point is 01:40:04 additions have since been made, but substantially it is the same as it was in the 20s. Darling's reign has been known as one of libeles, because the press seemed, during the whole administration, perpetually in hot water. Even the Gazette was bitten by the prevailing epidemic and was criminally prosecuted for an alleged libel on the first and retiring Attorney General of the Colony, Saxe Bannister Esquire. The paper, however, won its case. but Hall of the Monitor, who had deserved especially well of the colony in having reared a numerous and virtuous family, Wentworth and Wardell of the Australian, and the others,
Starting point is 01:40:46 were always more or less in trouble. The liberty of the press was certainly established, but the fact was that the authorities had not as yet thoroughly realised what such a matter meant, nor had the editors on their side made a moderate use of their liberty, hence the friction. but for Darling in 1826, the colony would have been bankrupt. Some idiots spread a rumour that the Bank of New South Wales was about to stop payment. The inevitable scare followed, and only that the governor helped the bank from the treasurer's chest, disaster would probably have taken place. Mrs. Darling, the wife of the governor, established a female school of industry, not far from St James's Church.
Starting point is 01:41:32 Major Gulban, the first colonial secretary, after whom the well-known Sydney Street was named, returned to England. He was, remarked his biographer, a man of uncontaminated spirit, marked integrity and indefatigable zeal. He was succeeded by the Honourable Alexander McLeigh, who, with his wife and family, arrived in the Marquess of Hastings. End of Chapter 5 Chapter 6 of the City of Sydney By John Arthur Barry This Librivox recording is in the public domain
Starting point is 01:42:15 Sydney in the 20s continued In April 1826 Mr Howe informs us in his gazette That Mr Isles' thoroughbred mare Imported ex-Columbia dropped to fine bay foal This being the first blood horse Born on Australian soil
Starting point is 01:42:35 And by the way, it should should be said that the original Howe, George, had now been dead some years, and that Robert his son ran the paper in these comparatively good new days. The filial eulogium is worth reproducing. Mr George Howe, the Institute of Printer and Publisher of the Sydney Gazette and New South Wales advertiser, as well as the compiler and publisher of the New South Wales Pocket Almanac, yielded up on the 11th of May all his ardues. labours at the visitation of death.
Starting point is 01:43:11 He has the undisputed honour of being the primary editor of Australia, and his memory will run co-evil with New South Wales, having succeeded in rearing up and establishing, amidst hosts of difficulties that humble but important structure, the Sydney Gazette, and thus attained the genuine printer's greatest ambition, even in death, a typographical monument, in which, though silent in the tomb,
Starting point is 01:43:38 he will ever proclaim himself to us, the progenitor of printing. We hope that the reprint of our paternal and beloved typographist will, in the technical phraseology of Franklin, appear once more in a new and more beautiful edition, corrected and amended by the author. Poor old man. From what can be gathered, despite his son's tall talk, he had on the whole a very hard, dreary and squalid time of it,
Starting point is 01:44:06 snubbed by one faction, kicked by another, and swindled by both. Late in October 26, there arrived the Waterwich, the first 74 to enter an Australian port. She was in command of commander Sir James Brisbane, brother of the late governor, and was bound from Trincomalee to South America. Fine and high and imposing she must have bulk to the eyes of the citizens. During Darling's time too,
Starting point is 01:44:38 we find the second recurrence of that novel and severe distemper, influenza, or Qatar, as they called it then, with which we of today are so unpleasantly familiar. It prevailed throughout the colony, and gave rise to much distress. Its first visitation was in 1820, when it's by the violence and fury of the attack consigned many people to the grave.
Starting point is 01:45:03 Next year, Hooping-off was introduced by the ship Morley, and the disease killed so many children and became so virulent that the schooner alligator had to be formed into a quarantine station. Later on the transport bussora merchant introduced a slight epidemic of smallpox, otherwise the health of the city and the colony kept throughout fairly good. In the time of Governor Darling was produced the first Australian ghost story which merits notice because from out a commonplace and brutal murder
Starting point is 01:45:38 was evolved a romance which has not only had in diversely embroidered aspects, an almost worldwide reputation, but is very firmly believed in by many persons at the present day. The commonly accepted story in its bare outline is that Worrell and Fisher were too well-to-do farmers of Campbelltown. Suddenly Fisher disappeared.
Starting point is 01:46:01 Worrell, pretending to be in his confidence, hinted that he had gone to England to escape prosecution for for forgery and so wished his departure kept secret. By and by he produced a letter, empowering him to sell the farm and belongings of the absent man, also a power of attorney. Then he advertised all Fisher's property for sale.
Starting point is 01:46:23 But the very day before this came off, notes the psychological moment, an old man saw Fisher or his ghost, sitting on a fence. The vision, according to the best etiquette in such matters, appeared three times. Rumors spread. The place was searched,
Starting point is 01:46:41 blood marks and footsteps were found, the last leading towards a waterhole, in which the decomposed body was discovered by a black fellow and identified as that of the missing man. Suspicion naturally turned to Worrell as being the last person seen in Fisher's company and as being in possession of his property.
Starting point is 01:47:02 Worrell was apprehended, tried and executed, making, at the last moment, a full confession of his guilt. The true facts of the case were that Worrell murdered Fisher, and, coolly taking possession of his farm and effects, tried to sell them piecemeal, saying that he had documents that gave him power to do so. In one or two instances he forged receipts in Fisher's name
Starting point is 01:47:27 for the purchase of stock, etc. It was a long premeditated crime to get hold of his victim's property, which was worth some thousands of pounds in land, houses and horses. Worrell, in the actual matter-of-fact version, never advertised the farm for sale. No talk of any ghost appeared in the proceedings at the trial.
Starting point is 01:47:51 Both Fisher and Worrell were ex-convicts, and both bore but indifferent characters. The crime was an ordinary, brutal, clumsy murder, nor were there any of the sensational effects recorded by romancists attending either its discovery or the expiation of it. Actually, the most striking and dramatic incident of the whole case was furnished by the black fellow Gilbert employed as tracker when, skimming the top of the pool with a leaf, he tasted it
Starting point is 01:48:22 and exclaimed that it was the fat of a white man. But Worrell did not, in spite of the storywriters, throw the body of the victim into the pool at all. He merely hid it in some rushes close by. Then, growing uneasy, he removed it and buried it a few yards away. Of course, the juices of the decomposing body may have drained into the pool, but probably Gilbert was only gammoning,
Starting point is 01:48:48 and he or his fellows had already seen indications of the grave. However, here condensed are the false and the true stories of Fisher's Ghost, but to convince many folk that the first version, Ghost and All, is not the correct one, would be a very hard task. Now let us take a glance at the Sydney of 1826 to 1828. George Street was of course the main and indeed the only thoroughfare of importance and extended with many and frequent gaps
Starting point is 01:49:21 for about a mile and a half along the hollow, through the centre of which once ran the tank stream, now a trickling rill being gradually civilised out of existence. The town, writes an historian of that day, occupies the whole of the hollow, creeping up the gradual ascent on each side. The ridge on the left is successively crowned by the lofty-looking buildings of the horse barracks,
Starting point is 01:49:45 the colonial hospital, the convict barracks, and a fine Gothic Catholic chapel. Beyond these lies the promenade of Hyde Park, flanked towards the town by a roe, of pretty cottages, and towards the country by a high-bricked-walled garden appertaining to the government. On the ridge to the right of the cove, rows above rows of neat white cottages present themselves, overlooked by the commanding position of Fort Philip, with its signal-post and telegraphic appendages, these last, probably the semaphore by means of which
Starting point is 01:50:20 communication was maintained with the governor when absent at Parramatta. Following this we behold in succession The Military Hospital and Windmill St James's Church The Gothic Presbyterian Kirk Dr Lange And beyond these the military barracks Forming three-fourths of a large square
Starting point is 01:50:39 Now winyard And opening to George Street With an extensive green plot in the centre For purposes of parade The portion of the town to the right Is best known as the Rocks This is considered the St Giles and the division of the town to the left, the St James portion of Sydney,
Starting point is 01:50:58 most of the superior citizens inhabiting the latter, and the lower class is chiefly the former, though the rocks can undoubtedly boast of many handsome houses with highly respectable inmates. A few hundred yards from the head of the cove towards the left stands the Governor's House, with its beautiful domain in front. On the right shore of the cove, continues our author, you first see the mansion of Mr R. Campbell,
Starting point is 01:51:25 one of our oldest and most respectable merchants, with its garden full of flowers and fruit trees, and wharf and storehouse next the beach. Next you observe the townhouse of Captain Piper, then the government's dockyard, against the surrounding walls whereof are built the working sheds and storehouses, with its boat landings and little wet dock
Starting point is 01:51:46 scooped out of the adjoining shore. Then came the high buildings, composing the commissary stores, beyond which is the wooden government wharf, jutting out into the harbour, and further on, the landing warehouses of the various merchants, connected with our imports and export trade,
Starting point is 01:52:05 a low wall there terminating the cove, to prevent its being filled up by the alluvial deposits from the rivulet. The above is, perhaps, the best description extant of circular key, and its surroundings some 70-odd years ago. The land near the cove was the most valuable of any, and there the houses were built to joining each other. Further along they straggled in rows of detached cottages, whitewashed and generally one-story in height,
Starting point is 01:52:35 a veranda in front, enclosed with a paling fence, and standing each in its own garden. There are still a few of these ancient residences to be found, but not in George Street. The streets were wide because their boundaries were as yet so slightly defined. They were unpaved and unlit, and troops of homeless cows and goats roamed them by night and by day. Even then, in its second youth, Sydney must have presented a pre-eminently English aspect.
Starting point is 01:53:04 For one visitor says, that, but for the cages of bright-coloured birds exposed for sale, look at Lower George Street now, and the gangs of convicts marching to and fro in single file in their yellow or grey jackets, and canvas overalls, daubed with broad arrows,
Starting point is 01:53:20 P-Bs, C-Bs, and various numerals in black, white and red, with perhaps the jail gang straggling by sulkily in their jingling leg chains. He might easily have imagined himself at home. He, however, forgets the climate. The Gothic Catholic chapel mentioned above is, of course, St. Mary's, or rather was the forerunner of the present great cathedral of that name, not built until many years later, and even now incomplete. Writing in 1834, Dr. Lang says,
Starting point is 01:53:55 the Roman Catholic chapel is an ambitious edifice, built of hewn stone in the form of a cross, and occupying a very prominent situation when viewed from the water. The foundation had been laid by Macquarie in October 1821, and the Reverend J.J. Therry was the person to whose exertions much of the success of its erection was due, but to return to our city of 26 to 28. Gulban Street was then absolutely houseless,
Starting point is 01:54:26 and for this reason was often quoted to strangers by the jokers of the town, as remarkable for no burglary ever having taken place in it. There were six places of worship, St. Phillips, St. George's, the Scots, Kirk, a Methodist chapel, and St. Mary's. There was a male orphan school endowed by the state, and a benevolent asylum supported by private charity. There were two steam flower mills. mills, three watermills and numerous windmills, which could turn a bushel of wheat into flour in a little over ten minutes. Sydney now too produced its own spirits, a Mr Cooper having started a distillery about a mile along the Parramatta Road, a continuation of George Street.
Starting point is 01:55:11 Also a Mr Underwood established another upon the South Head Road. Thus the citizens were amply supplied with homemade Tanglefoot, or, as the papers of the day termed it, a pure spirit manufactured from the good grain of the colony. The Australia, once the first post office and home of Nichols, and the Royal Hotels in George Street, and Hills Tavern close to Hyde Park, were said to be as good houses as those in any English town of the same size, but there were many low pot houses and publics scattered broadcast about the place.
Starting point is 01:55:48 Loggings were very reasonable, the most respectable ones seldom exceeding a pound per week, and averaging 15 shillings each for a double room, the landlady making all your purchases and cooking and serving up all your meals for this sum. At most street corners were fruit stands, from which noisy sellers bawled their wares, a feature of our city still in full swing. The town was divided into six police districts,
Starting point is 01:56:15 each with a lock-up and a night watch attached. As to its water supply, Sydney appears to have been still dependent on the tank-stream excavations, but these in a dry season being found inadequate the authorities were casting about for some other source of supply. Let us hope that the soldier's wives, who, as already mentioned, a writer alleges in 1816, washed clothes in the tanks, had discontinued the habit. Even now, amusements were very few indeed. The news of the world was six months old when it arrived, and then only brought broken and garbled accounts.
Starting point is 01:56:56 Personal scandal still formed the most prominent feature of society talk. Certainly, Mr James Underwood, by the way, the builder of the first vessel launched in Sydney, was said to be erecting a theatre, but of this undertaking little else is to be learned. Indeed, in these days the jail was turned into a theatre. A temple of Thespice, the debtor's room afforded the arena, and persons of the highest standing in the town were not ashamed to witness the crude representations
Starting point is 01:57:26 of these dramatic enthusiasts. Not till 1833 did Sydney possess a regular bona fide theatre, the theatre royal, opened by Mr Barrett Levy, the licensee of the Royal Hotel in George Street, who had, sometimes subsequently, fitted up the saloon of that establishment for the exhibition of the legitimate drama. The fair sex kept up the fashions as well as they could, naithless labouring under many disadvantages. The moment a lady blooming fresh from England is known to be tripping along a Sydney Street, you will see our prying fair, singly or in groups, popping eagerly to take notes of the cut of her gown, the figure of her bonnet, and the pattern and colour of the scarf or shawl she displays upon her shoulders, that they may forthwith post off
Starting point is 01:58:16 to put themselves in the dear fashion too. Nor did our grandmother's grudge the cash to pay for their newest modes. For one person who kept a lady's fashionable repository, we are told, departed home with a nice little fortune of £12,000, all acquired in less than six years. It may be worth noticing that in the first three months of 1826, 800 people, exclusive of those committed to the criminal court, had passed before the Sydney bench.
Starting point is 01:58:49 But on March the 12th in the same year, to the amazement of the magistrates, there was not a solitary case. This unprecedented incident so staggered the court that, fearing the citizens were becoming downhearted, it issued no less than 76 spirit licences that same warning. As to the more detailed topography of the city, accounts differ materially.
Starting point is 01:59:13 The earlier ones, written mostly by people on the same morning, the spot, deal in generalities as to the locality, and their authors, thoughtless for posterity, seemed to imagine that everybody would be always as wise as themselves, respecting matters of such common knowledge, which practice still obtains. We know for certain, however, such facts as that, where Petty's Hotel now stands, was in these years Captain Ross's Garden. Rossi was then police magistrate, that cattle was slaughtered at doors, then slaughterhouse point, that people used to get their firewood in the neighbourhood of Cooper's Distillery,
Starting point is 01:59:50 already spoken of. That's where the big shop of David Jones and Company now stands was a cow yard, a butcher's premises held the sight of Kidmans. In York Street stood a-stocks, and the youngsters' great amusement was to pelt the unfortunates, both there and in the pillories,
Starting point is 02:00:08 with rotten eggs and vegetables from the market. Until Busby brought water in from the Lochland swamp, by means of a drain to hide park, whence the citizens carted or carried it, the tanks formed the sole supply, useless in a drought. Surrey Hills was mostly all-open country,
Starting point is 02:00:30 dotted sparsely with market gardens, and a few large private residences. Between Willamalu and Darlinghurst lay a deep scrub-coloured valley, through which a creek ran, and emptied itself into the bay. Children used to frequent Flagstaff Hill, where our observatory now stands,
Starting point is 02:00:49 to cut the bushes with which it was overgrown. Out of these they made brooms. Broadly, the city boundaries were, in these days, on the north, the harbour, on the south, the long low ridge of the Surrey hills, on the west, the beautiful lagoon of clear and extensive saltwater running two miles inland north and south, Darling Harbour, and on the east, the deep valley already mentioned.
Starting point is 02:01:15 Our limitations at this time were narrow indeed. Still, from the last period in which we had a glance at it, the place had grown wonderfully, showing with every year that in modern parlance it had decidedly come to stay. In 1830 was laid by the Chief Justice of New South Wales, the foundation stone of the Sydney College, now our present Sydney Grammar School. Inserted in the stone was a brass plate
Starting point is 02:01:44 with an inscription reading, this foundation stone of the Sydney College, an institution founded for the vigorous and pious promotion of polite literature and the liberal arts among the youth of Australia, was laid by Francis Forbes, Chief Justice of New South Wales, on an auspicious day, viz, the 26th of January, in the year of Our Lord, 1830, in the happy reign of George IV,
Starting point is 02:02:10 Lieutenant General Ralph Darling, being Governor of New South Wales. It was erected on a portion of over an acre and a half of land, the gift of Sir Thomas Brisbane in 1825, to an institution known then as the Sydney Free Grammar School, conducted in a private house, but discontinued in the succeeding year. This land was very eligibility situated near the racecourse, and the foundation ceremony was attended by,
Starting point is 02:02:39 besides the general public, over 80 of the trustees who walked in procession from the Royal Hotel to the site of the building. As in our day, so in theirs, our worthy forebears probably seldom neglected the right of wetting the stone. The saloon of the Royal, however, it should be in all fairness mentioned, was their usual meeting place,
Starting point is 02:03:01 being rented for Mr. Levy for that purpose. The Chief Justice made a speech at the ceremony, and Dr. Lang improved the occasion. The function ended with the acclamations of all present, in testimony of their joy on so interesting and auspicious an occasion. The first president was the Honourable Francis Forbes, with Messrs Samuel Torrey and George Allen, as treasurer and secretary respectively,
Starting point is 02:03:29 and on the first committee appear such well-known names as those of Sir John Jameson, Dr. Lang, Messrs Sydney and Francis Stephen, J. E. Manning, W. Bland, D. D. Cooper, S. Lord, and others, all intimately connected with the, the past and present history of the city. The architect was Edward Allen, who took rank as a benefactor
Starting point is 02:03:50 through foregoing a third of his professional fees, £125, for the benefit of the institution. The requisite sum for the erection of the college was to be raised by the sale of 200 shares of £50 each, 50 additional shares to be left open for the convenience of residents in the East Indies or elsewhere beyond seas, until the first day of January, AD 1833. In a progress payment college account, during 1830,
Starting point is 02:04:23 appears an item, paid Mr. Iredale for spades, picks, etc. One pound, four shillings and tuppence. A memento this of the founding of the present house of Lassiter and Company. Among the shareholders occur the name of John Towell, the convict Quaker transported for forgery, Mrs. Raby, at one time supposed to be Margaret Catchpole, W.C. Wentworth, late one of the committee, Robert Howe, editor of the Sydney Gazette, Robert Campbell,
Starting point is 02:04:53 the first merchant, and many others of note and notoriety. On January the 19th, 1835, the college was opened with Mr. W.T. Cape as its headmaster, and some cash and shares in hand, an omen of prosperity and good management that, as all of as well know, was not transitory, but has continued throughout the history of the colony to the present day. End of Chapter 6. Chapter 7 of Sydney Past and Present by John Arthur Barry. This Librivox recording is in the public domain. The early 30s. We have seen what took place at some of the anniversary dinners and how they gradually assumed a patriotic aspect. The emancipists who formed the guests, talking to the guests, talking
Starting point is 02:05:51 more reform than social business. Wentworth, the Apostle of Liberty, and Darling, could not hit it at all, the governor, looking upon a patriot as little better than a rebel, so that Wentworth had to keep pretty quiet, not even attending the Great Dinner of 1831, the 43rd anniversary. The promoters said they were not going to talk politics at all. Indeed, they called themselves the Australian Society to promote the grope, and consumption of colonial produce and manufacture,
Starting point is 02:06:25 a sort of Chamber of Commerce, established sometime before by the principal men of business in Sydney. These gentlemen invited their friends to dinner at Morris's Crown and Anka Hotel in George Street. Tickets were ten shillings. At sunrise on the 26th, the Royal Standard was hoisted at Dawes Point, and the guns there, and at Fort Macquarie, at noon,
Starting point is 02:06:49 fired a salute of 43, 1.4. for each year, the two batteries firing alternately. At dinner, no less than 130 guests assembled, with Samuel Terry, then perhaps the richest man in the colony as president, and Daniel Cooper, the knight's uncle, in the vice chair. They toasted Macquarie as usual. Currency lads and lasses, the name given to the Australian-born men and women, the judges and the bar, and William Charles Wentworth, whose name was the,
Starting point is 02:07:22 subject for a tremendous outburst of cheering. Then, all at once, the meeting seems to have lost its head, or, at least the younger members of it did, and a violent oratory took the place of trade talk. Darling was arraigned as a tyrant, and sedition ousted commerce. Hall, the proprietor of the monitor, who was present, was held up as an example of one of Darling's victims, prosecuted time after time, imprisoned, stripped of feet of. his property, deprived of his church pew, even for simply criticising the government's policy in his newspaper. Nichols and other young orators fairly carried the assembly with them, and their elders,
Starting point is 02:08:04 grave and reverend merchants who had come to talk a little shop, found themselves before they knew where they were, cheering the speakers, and volubly talking treason, or what in those days was held to be very much akin to it. It was a memorable dinner. Gradually the press was beginning, to be a power in the land. The Howes were gone, and men like Wentworth, Nichols and Hall had replaced them. Robert Howe of the Gazette was dead, drowned while fishing off Pinchguts with his infant son. The latter was, however, rescued by a sailor. Some kind hand writes of how, that he was eccentric, cannot be denied, but his were errors of the head, not of the heart, As an affectionate husband and father, a kind and considerate master, he was second to none.
Starting point is 02:08:56 His hand was ever open to relieve the distress, and of his charities few knew the extent. May his errors be forgotten, and the recollection of his many redeeming qualities be at once his excuse and his epitaph. During the last year of Darling's reign also died another old identity in the person of Bungari, King of one of the principal coast tribes in the neighbourhood of Port Jackson. Governor's King, Hunter, Bly, Macquarie and Brisbane had been his patrons and protectors. Indeed, he seems to have been a favourite with everybody. Macquarie had given him land for himself and his tribe to camp upon
Starting point is 02:09:36 between Milton's point and George's head. And every king's birthday, when the governor put on his new uniform, Bungary got the old one, and, minus the trousers and boots, which nothing could induce him to wear, he used to parade Sydney in great state. He was a splendid mimic, as so many of his countrymen in their wild state are still,
Starting point is 02:09:58 and could, with wonderful accuracy, depict the gestures and peculiarities of the various governors and high officials whom he had served under. Bungary died in November 1830, and he was buried on Garden Island, and finding their very good company in Major John Owens
Starting point is 02:10:17 and Judge Advocate Benz, who, together with Captain Logan, late commandants at Morton Bay, and mysteriously murdered there, had been brought and placed in his friend Brent's tomb. The island then looked very different. His two hummocks, one to the north and one to the south, have now been levelled and built upon, and the whole place turned into a depot for naval stores belonging to the imperial government. But in those days it must have seemed an ideally peaceful place of sepulchre,
Starting point is 02:10:49 Since Philip tried to grow cabbages there, little had been done to the island, but some 30 years before Bungary was buried, a redoubt carrying a few guns, had been erected fronting the Harbour Fairway. When the island was made an imperial naval depot, the bodies were removed to the burial ground of St Thomas's Church at North Sydney, where, at this day, the Curious can inspect the cenotaph that covers their remains. Queen Goosebury, the consort of Bungary, survived her lord and master some years. She, however, was buried over on the north shore,
Starting point is 02:11:27 but the body was afterwards removed to the Devonshire Street Cemetery, Redfern, where, until the recent removals, her tomb was still to be seen. A Sydney gentleman is in possession of the brass cup, holding about a pint in which the old lady used to receive her state allowance of rum. Altogether we may take it that the pair had to be a pence of rum. a very good time under the rule of the white invader. Says a newspaper of the time, the well-known Aboriginal chief Bungary,
Starting point is 02:11:56 died after a lingering illness at Garden Island. The facetiousness of the native chief and the superiority of his mental endowments over those of the generality of his race obtained for him a more than ordinary share of regard from the whole inhabitants of the colony, which was testified to by frequent donations suited to his condition, not only from private individuals, but from the authorities. On May the 14th, 1831,
Starting point is 02:12:27 the first steamer arrived from England. Her name was the Sophia Jane, Bidelfth Master. He was once a lieutenant in the Royal Navy. She came via the Cape of Good Hope, carrying passengers and cargo. This was the first steamer to enter Port Jackson, although a couple of months earlier, a small steamer had been launched on the waters of the harbour. She was called the surprise and made her trial trip from Sydney Cove to Parramatta in four hours. Henry Gilbert Smith, one of the directors of the commercial bank, was her owner, and she was brought out from England in sections to his order, put together at Neutral Bay, and launched there on March the 31st, 1831.
Starting point is 02:13:12 Captain Devlin already referred to as the first to be born in the corner. colony of Australian parents was her commander and the late Honourable George Thornton, one of the passengers on her trial trip. She does not, however, for some reason or other, seem to have been a success and was presently sold to a Hobart town firm. A few particulars about the Sophia Jane may be of interest, seeing that she was our first steamcoaster as well as our first tug. Originally she was built for the English coasting trade and was bought by a Sydney firm for £8,000 to run between that port and Newcastle. She had accommodation for 53 passengers in three classes, was 126 feet in length,
Starting point is 02:13:58 26 feet in beam, and drew six feet of water. Her tonnage was 256, her engines of 50 horsepower, and her draft of water only six feet. Her top speed was eight knots an hour, and she towed the first ship ever taken in that manner from her anchorage in Port Jackson out to sea. This vessel was the Lady Harewood, storehouse master, which arrived in Sydney on March 4, 1831, from England with prisoners, and left again on June the 12th in the same year, bound to London. Apparently, she was left to find her own way in, so far at least as a tow was concerned. This year of 31 seems to have been prolific in steamer record. for in October there was launched on the Williams River,
Starting point is 02:14:48 the first one actually built in Australia. Her builder was J.H. Groves of Parramatta, and she too was placed in the Newcastle-Sidney trade. The Sophia Jane must have been as much a revelation to the citizens of her day, as were the great liners of the P&O and Orient to those of our own. Perhaps too she was thrown open to inspection, much after the same manner as each new ship is to us,
Starting point is 02:15:15 and the currency lads and lasses paid their money, and roamed over and explored and wondered and praised as we do when some fresh marvel of constructive sea science appears in our harbour. Eventually the historic vessel was broken up by Mr. Chown of Pyrmont, who had seen her launch in England. Mr. Chown used some of her timbers to build a craft called, appropriately enough, the OPS, because constructed from old pieces of ships. During 1831 appeared the first number of the Sydney Herald.
Starting point is 02:15:50 The paper was started by Mrs Stephen and Stokes as a weekly, with the motto, bound to no party of no sectam I. This declaration, however, was dropped when the paper fell into the hands of the late Mr James Fairfax. Towards the end of the year, Governor Darling left the colony, after having consistently, as one writer puts it, during the whole of his office,
Starting point is 02:16:15 attempted to throttle the aspiration of a young people after the freedom due to them. Lang, on the other hand, has much to say this is good of him. Another military governor soon took hold on the reins of office in the person of Major General Richard Burke, one of whose first public visits was made to the distillery of Mr James Underwood, near to South Head Road, which he minutely inspected, and doubtless liberally tested the produce of. The new governor also early showed himself a liberal patron of the drama.
Starting point is 02:16:51 We have already seen how Mr Levy had given performances in the saloon of his Royal Hotel, and here, on December 26, 1832, money was publicly taken at the doors. Douglas Gerald's Black-Eyed Susan was the play, while Moncrief's Monsieur Tonson was selected for the farce. Encouraged by the success of his venture, Mr Levy built the Theatre Royal and opened it in the latter part of 1833 with the best company that he could get together. Mr Meredith was the first manager.
Starting point is 02:17:25 The new theatre, it should be noted, stood just at the back of the hotel and held about 900 people. A preliminary at home was held under the special patronage of the governor. This entertainment consisted of 13 sketches, nine songs, no encores allowed, and selections by the band of the 17th regiment. Half an hour interval was allowed for the audience to liquefy their palettes, much we may be sure to the profit of the adjacent royal. Such was the housewarming of our first actual and legitimate theatre.
Starting point is 02:18:01 In October it opened with the Miller and his men and the Irishman in London. The admission was five shillings per head, and people fought themselves lucky to get, a seat at that. The press had little to say as to the merits of the performance, Knowles being the only actor singled out for mention. Perhaps critics were blessedly scarce in those days, and wisely preferred to let alone what they were not quite certain about. With Burke's advent, the press began to hold up its head again. A contemporary of the Sydney Gazette, on July the 3rd, 1832, remarks mysteriously, Gazette afflicted,
Starting point is 02:18:43 with cholera morbus, also suffered much from sore eyes during the latter part of the year. But in November, under Burke's beneficent rule, we find, Sydney Gazette, which had been in a declining state, pronounced out of danger. Coloura and sore eyes quite gone. Jokes these, that if falling rather dulled on our ears three generations later, were, you may depend on it, thoroughly appreciated and chuckled over by their makers and readers. Besides the Government Gazette published weekly, there were now, 1834, the Sydney Gazette published three times a week, and the Herald and monitor twice a week.
Starting point is 02:19:27 The Australian had been discontinued for some time, but it presently started again as a weekly. There was, too, a paper called The Currency Lad, owned and edited by a native born, and for that reason very popular indeed with young Australia. But it soon died, its friends averred for lack of a proper press, its enemies for lack of principle.
Starting point is 02:19:52 The first serial publication in Sydney was the New South Wales magazine, edited by the Reverend Ralph Mansfield, an ex-Wesleyan missionary, and the successor of Howe in the management of the Sydney Gazette, and Dr John Schlotsky, MD, a Bavarian. fancy the courage of those men in trying to run a magazine sixty-seven years ago mansfield by the way in addition to his other avocations was the leading one of the four booksellers then in sydney what would not a bibliophile now give for the privilege of a free run amongst their original stock a curious incident happened in the earlier part of burke's rule and one that scared the citizens not a little
Starting point is 02:20:38 A brig called the Anne Jameson lay alongside the King's Wharf, discharging her London cargo. All her gunpowder was supposed to have been removed to the magazine on the North Shore. Nevertheless, she blew up with a tremendous explosion and eight people were killed. The casks containing the powder had,
Starting point is 02:21:00 it appears, leaked freely during the voyage, and the contents had spread among the bar and rod iron of which her cargo was in a great measure composed. Thus, when discharging, the friction set up by drawing these out, ignited the powder. The vessel was totally destroyed. Indeed, as the old chronicler remarks,
Starting point is 02:21:23 a melancholy occasion. Old Dr. Lang about this time complains about the grossierite, bad manners, frequently in evidence amongst the audience at the theatre royal, and, inferential, thanks God that he has never attended a performance there.
Starting point is 02:21:42 But he was always girding at something. In the language of our present currency lads, he would have been termed a hard old case. He lived in Jameson Street not far from his church and cynically studied the manners of the citizens, retaining always a deadly antipathy to emancipists, fostering free emigration. He imported Scotch-Masons to build his church
Starting point is 02:22:06 and encouraged thousands of immigrants to settle in the colony, and showing, in spite of all his aggressiveness, a fine pride in the city, for which, despite his many faults and foibles, he did much. Listen to his description of how the people take their pleasure. About four o'clock in the afternoon, before dinner in the Utton circles, but some after it among people of inferior station,
Starting point is 02:22:32 all the coach-house doors in Sydney fly open, simultaneously and the company begin to take their places for the afternoon drive on the South Head Road, formed by Macquarie, and running out to the lighthouse erected by him. In half an hour, the streets are comparatively deserted, by far the greater proportion of the well-dressed part of the population being out of town. In the meantime, the long line of equipages from the ponderous coach of the member of council, moving leisurely and proudly along, or the lively barouche of Mr. Whalebone, the shipowner, to the one horse shea, in which the landlord of the Tinker's arms,
Starting point is 02:23:14 drives out his blousy dame to take the Hare arter dinner, doubles Hyde Park corner and arrives on the corso, while ever and anon, some young bachelor, merchant or military officer, eager to display his skill in horsemanship, dashes briskly forward along the cavalcade at full game, gallop. And in your mind's eye, you can see the grim old doctor shake his head in censure of what he deems foolish ostentation and waste of time, as he takes his solitary way, to contemplate the wonderful works of God in the romantic walks of the government domain, along the margin of beautifully
Starting point is 02:23:55 romantic walks traced with the utmost taste. It was during the passage of the Stirling Castle, the vessel that brought Lang and his 50 Scots-Masons out, that the idea of the Sydney School of Arts was first mooted, although the doctor himself seems just then to have had little to do with it, leaving the matter in the hands of a fellow minister, the Reverend Henry Carmichael. This gentleman organised throughout the voyage, classes among his fellow passengers, for their better education and enlightenment. Thus these hard-headed Scots wrestled for months with the mysteries of algebra, euclid, logarithms, and the higher mathematics, besides scriptural theses and several ologies. Not only was this course of study pursued at the time,
Starting point is 02:24:47 but rules and an agreement sketched for its prosecution and continuance when Australia should be reached. But on arrival there was so much else to be thought about and done that, but for Mr. Carmichael's tireless efforts and the liberal encouragement of Sir Richard Burr, the scheme would have come to naught. As it was, it flourished and took root. The story of its actual inception is most interesting. And Mr. John Riddle Fenwick left a written statement with the then-president, Mr. Dalgarno, in 1887, to the following effect.
Starting point is 02:25:24 In the reign of William IV, year 1833, January the 19th, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon, three men and a boy ascended Church Hill for the purpose. of forming and founding the first school of arts in all the Australian colonies. The union being represented in the persons of Mr John Riley, Sadler, Pitt Street, formerly George Street, a native of Ireland, shrewd, sharp and clear-sighted, Mr William Hipkiss, botanist, native of England, and Mr David Taylor, a builder, and a native of Scotland.
Starting point is 02:25:59 They entered a brick building, probably the old Surveyor General's office, situated halfway between Dr. Lang's Church and the windmill by a side door into a long, narrow room, at one end of which was a window with 12 squares of 12 by 10 glass. A small bedroom table was placed end on to the window. Three empty brandy cases were put near the table for seats. Pen, ink, paper and a copy of the rules of an English school of arts were put on the table. Mr. Riley was chosen chairman, Mr. Hipkiss's secretary, and Mr. Taylor treasurer.
Starting point is 02:26:36 A strange noise being heard outside the building, the boy went to ascertain the cause. He returned and informed Mr. Riley that it was made by two hundred men in irons, escorted by a detachment of the 17th regiment. Then said Mr. Riley, the work we are engaged in today will assist to unrivet those chains and allow those people to become men again, and not as now beasts of burden.
Starting point is 02:27:03 Then, looking at the boy, he said, You will, no doubt, in the course of nature, be alive after we have passed away. Promise me that you will always mention who were the founders of the Sydney School of Arts, which promise I now fulfil and wish this statement to be read at the annual meeting. Mr. Dalgarno added that Mrs. Riley, Hipkiss and Taylor
Starting point is 02:27:26 had all passed away, leaving only the boy who accompanied them to live to see the magnitude of the present School of Arts. Also, on the President's motion, Mr. Fenwick was made an honorary life member of the institution. In the following March of 1833, more formal proceedings were taken and a public meeting held. Among the speakers were such men as Mr. Carmichael,
Starting point is 02:27:54 Mr Edward D.S. Thompson, Reverend Ralph Mansfield, Mr. Charles Windayer and Dr. Lang. In 1835 it was removed to its present site, having then on its role 112 members. Not, however, until 1859 did Sir W. Denison lay the foundation stone of the building of our day. Unfortunately, no official record was kept of the proceedings of which Mr. Fenwick writes, but it was probably only a preliminary meeting on the part of the three representatives, informal and hardly to be spoken of as a founding, but still the first in Australia with such an object in view.
Starting point is 02:28:37 End of Chapter 7. Chapter 8 of Sydney Past and Present by John Arthur Barry. This Librevox recording is in the public domain. The later 30s. In the 30s, there was as yet no street connecting Sydney Cove with Darling Harbour, and this fact led to the making of the argument,
Starting point is 02:29:05 The rocks at this time was looked upon as a rising suburb, and Miller's point had become quite fashionable. Fears were on that account expressed that such an enterprise as cutting through the dividing ridge would harm the locality by introducing an undesirable class of residents. But those people whose interests lay around the shores of Darling Harbour, late Cockle Bay, persevered, and agitated a long time for either a tunnel or a cut. The Surveyor General reported upon it, and there was as much discussion and argument about the affair as there is today respecting the North Shore Bridge. Finally the cut plan was adopted, the estimates for that being only £895 as against £7,000 for a tunnel. Prisoners were lent by the government and the job was to be finished in 21 months from the beginning of October 1832.
Starting point is 02:30:03 Later on, the contractors made an offer to build an arch to carry a roadway over the whole affair for an extra £1,500. But funds had run out, and nothing was done for a long time, other than to throw a little bridge across the excavation. There seems to have been about 16 or 17 promoters to the affair, with a capital of some £2,000. Intermittently, gangs of convicts toiled and sweated at elaborating the rude gau.
Starting point is 02:30:33 left by the original contractors, until, when transportation ceased, they were withdrawn to make way for free labour. In 1838, an old writer says, between the north end of Kent Street, and where it crosses to Church Hill, a deep cut has been made through the west side of the hill on which Fort Phillips stands, this part being called the Quarries. At the southern extremity of the street, several cottages and substantial dwelling-house, have been erected, most of them having small gardens attached, together with a beautifully diversified landscape view of the water and shores of Darling Harbour. Gradually, however, the place fell into disrepute, haunted as it was by gangs of thieves, and worse characters
Starting point is 02:31:22 still, whose depredations made it unsafe both by day and by night. Indeed, in our own time, there are lots of folk who would rather, if possible, avoid taking a walk through the Argyle cut towards the small hours, so difficult is it to live down a bad reputation acquired in early life? There are people living now who well remember the first bridge, a ramshackle rickety affair, but the second was looked upon as a very fine piece of work indeed. It was lit by a big kerosene lamp
Starting point is 02:31:55 for the guidance of late wayfarers across the chasm. Before the whole work was finished It must have cost something like £30,000, including the three present massive bridges, worthy specimens of old-time masonry that will, unless the resumption scheme
Starting point is 02:32:13 destroys them, last for many generations yet to come. Just a word as to how Sydney folk amused themselves out of doors since we last glanced at them taking their scant pleasures sadly enough. Some authorities, Notably Lang, as we have seen, alluded to the racing and drinking propensuses of the people in Brisbane's time, making mention too of not a little gambling in out-of-the-way corners. Probably even then, there were two up-schools in sequestered nooks,
Starting point is 02:32:46 and our grandfathers, as likely as not, were proficient at the old-time equivalent for Headingham. But as far back as 1810, we have records that they indulged in wilder species of recreation than these. In that year, for instance, at Parramatta, there was what we should now call a carnival, the principal attractions of a two-day sport being cock-fighting and bull-baiting. They hunted too,
Starting point is 02:33:15 and the description of the first run is worth reading. Having cast off by the government hut on the Nepean and drawn the cover around there for a native dog unsuccessfully, we tried the forest ground for a kangaroo, which we soon found. It went off in excellent style Along the sands by the riverside And crossed the cow pasture plains
Starting point is 02:33:37 Camden running a circle of about two miles Then recrossed Taking a direction for Mr Campbell's stockyard And thence to the back of the Badge Allen Hill To the head of the Boone Creek Where he was headed Thence he took the main range of the hills Between Badge Allen and Badge Allen Bingy
Starting point is 02:33:55 In a straight direction for Mr. Throsby's farm where the hounds ran into him and he was killed after a grand run of about two hours. The weight of the animal was upwards of £120. Evidently, an old man, with a very fine turn of speed, either that or his pursuers did not press him as closely as they might have done. Pugilism was the rage in England in those days, but little seems to have taken place in that line out here. the first record of anything of the kind being in 1814 when John Berringer met Charles Sefton about half a mile from the race course,
Starting point is 02:34:36 Hyde Park, and fought for two and a half hours. Sefton is said to have been the cleverest of the pair, but Berringer won the mill after very hard fighting by reason of his greater reach and height. Boat racing was always a favourite pastime. Mention, in referring to Devlin, has already been made of the whale boat race in 1830, but long before that,
Starting point is 02:35:01 there was a trial of speed from Bradley's head into the cove over a course of three and a half miles. The competitors were Captain Piper, naval officer of the port, Captain Law of the Batavia, Captain Johnson of the Guildford, and Captain Bell of the Minerva,
Starting point is 02:35:18 all vessels lying in the harbour. The winner was Captain Piper. In 1827, the first actual regatta took place. Its inception seems to have been due altogether to the Honourable Captain Rouse, afterwards the well-known sporting admiral who entered two boats of his own in the pulling match, the Mercury and the Centipede, and won the first and second events with them. The course was some four miles, time, 23 minutes. This event was followed by a sailing race for a purse of $50,
Starting point is 02:35:53 put together by the officers of HM ships, rainbow and success, added to a sweepstakes of $5 each. The course was from a breast of Farm Cove, round the sow and back to the starting place. Lieutenant Preston proved the winner with his boat Black Swan, coming in a mile and a half ahead. Then, to finish up with,
Starting point is 02:36:16 there was a race for watermen, the prize $50. No boat was to exceed 19 feet in the keel, but could pull any number of oars. The course was round Pinchgut. There were seven starters, but four cried enough after the first heat. Finally, Black Boy, owner James Shears,
Starting point is 02:36:37 took the lead and won, beating native youth and bungary by lengths. Such is a brief record of the first regatta that ever took place in our waters, the herald of our great institution of the present day, when scores of graceful flyers spread their white wings, and speed to and fro the great,
Starting point is 02:36:58 steamer doing dutious flagship, and a maud perhaps in just the same spot as that in which the bluff-bowed old whaler or merchantman served a similar purpose over three score and ten years ago. Wherever the Anglo-Saxon sets his foot, he plays cricket, and Australia is no exception to the axiom. The first game that any account can be found of took place on January the 1st, 1827 when the members of the Australia Cricket Club played together and had a dinner in the evening. Windsor had been challenged but for some reason or other refused to come to the scratch. But in 1830 there was a great match between 11 Australians and an equal number of the 57th regiment, the former winning by 24 runs.
Starting point is 02:37:49 In March they met again, the soldiers very confident and played for 10 guineas aside. and again the Australians won, this time by 32 runs. In the late 30s and early 40s, there was plenty of sport, horse racing, boating, cricket, etc, and the well-to-do citizen could, if he were so inclined, witness or partake in one or the other of these pastimes, every day in the week, and go to the play in the evening to finish off with. For strength and agility in athletic exercises, our country folk were preeminent, especially those settled about the Hawkesbury, known even then as Cornstalks.
Starting point is 02:38:32 One newspaper in 1831 gives a list of 32 names of persons, each of whom stood over six feet in height. Among the number was Cable, the champion boxer of that time. He stood six feet three and a half inches. Even at the present day, the Hawksbury natives are noted for their stature. a hardy and energetic race They were too these men Made so by their environments And perhaps less given to letting things slide Than are some of their latter-day prototypes
Starting point is 02:39:05 Who depend upon husbandry and stop-keeping for a livelihood Nor were the early-day horses A wit inferior to their masters in strength and stamina As an instance of this We are told that a mare Whose foal had just been weaned And a Philly, two and a half years old, were run up out of a clover field
Starting point is 02:39:26 and ridden a distance of 42 miles in two hours and 50 minutes, including several stoppages on the road. The journey was for a doctor. Neither of the horses were shod. The going was rough and the animals had never been fed on hay or corn, yet neither of them were the worse for the trip. During the six years of Burke's beneficent rule, he governed constitutionally without a constitution,
Starting point is 02:39:54 much of importance took place connected with the growth of our city, both physically and politically. The cove was still, at low tide, little better than a mud flat, littered by boat builders' rickety sheds, and temporarily and rudely constructed little wharves. It is said that the water then flowed right up to where the custom house now stands, and that on the site of the Paragon Hotel a small vessel had been built and launched, and another one several hundred yards at Pitt Street.
Starting point is 02:40:26 Also, that the tank stream was still navigable for small boats as far as Bridge Street. The stream, respecting which so many arguments have been held, is now said to have had its source somewhere about the spot in Hyde Park, where there is still to be seen a pond or two. One is near the corner of Liverpool and Elizabeth streets, little noticed by the general public. thence according to the best authorities it followed a course between george and pit streets through martin place to hunter street thence by hamilton lane crossing bridge street to pit street
Starting point is 02:41:02 and so into the harbour close to the present north shore ferry company's premises but at the best its true course is a matter of more or less surmise the brightest of old memories vary be this as it may the Legislative Council in 1834 began to think of resuming and reclaiming the foreshores around the cove and the construction of circular key
Starting point is 02:41:27 was mooted it was suggested that a civil engineer should be imported on a five years engagement at a salary of £800 per annum but the plan seems to have lapsed and we hear nothing more of it just then however a good deal
Starting point is 02:41:43 was done towards improving dollar harbour. Bathing in its waters would appear to have been strictly prohibited, for we read that a certain lieutenant finch of the 17th regiment was fined five shillings for indulging in such a luxury. Most people, at the present time, would not take a dip in it if paid that sum to do so. Here, by the way, is a curious advertisement from a London Times of 1834. Any lieutenants in the Royal Navy under the age of and with large families may obtain free passages to Sydney, New South Wales. Application should be made to CT-R-N post office, Hyde, Kent. Certain of the sumptuary laws of the city in these years of the Middle 30s and early 40s were decidedly curious,
Starting point is 02:42:38 yet are we not slowly drifting back in legislation to those benighted times. For instance, on Sunday, shops, those of butchers, bakers, fishmongers and greengrocers were to be closed. These only kept open till 10 a.m. Bakers might trade only on that day between 1 and 2 o'clock in the afternoon. Apothecaries at any hour. Constables might apprehend anybody who could not give a satisfactory account of themselves between sundown and 8 o'clock the next morning.
Starting point is 02:43:12 The Surveyor General, Sir Thomas Mitchell, was directed to a line and set out the count. and footways and mark them by posts, also to place the names of streets on house walls and fix numbers on the doors, which the tenants was bound to paint in at the end of a fortnight, or else pay a fine of ten shillings weekly. Footways were also to be levelled and steps taken away from the path. The town surveyor too was adjured to be on the alert to prevent people accumulating gravel or earth before their houses without giving notice, in which case he was to remove it as rubbish. At this date there were two posts a day. Every letter or packet, weighing less than half an ounce, was charged for transit from one post office to the other, in distance not exceeding
Starting point is 02:44:04 15 miles, the sum of 4 pence, over 15 miles, 5pence, above 170 miles 10pence, for 3,000, hundred miles one shilling. Letters sent by ship around the coastal ports cost fourpence. American letters cost threepence each. The mails, it may be remarked, were anything but regular, being forwarded when coach, vessel or steam packets
Starting point is 02:44:31 pleased to arrive or depart. Society too, or rather the different parts of it, was being gradually merged into a more component hole, although the terms sterling and currency to distinguish between the English and the colonial born were yet in use, and the pure marinos still prided themselves on being able to trace a stainless descent and gave themselves airs on that account. Recently arrived convicts were still known as Canaries, because of their yellow uniforms,
Starting point is 02:45:04 had people used any other colour for decoration than yellow. Yellow paint indeed was unsaleable, but the word convicts was dying out, and giving place to government men. Some years before this, an emancipist had even obtained a verdict for libel with 50-pound damages against a person who had called him a damned convict. In 1828 to 1829,
Starting point is 02:45:31 there were sailing out of the port, four vessels, constantly employed in the whale fishery, six others in sealing. There were two regular packets between Sydney and Newcastle, one between Sydney and Hobart Town, others to Port Dalry, and a number of small craft trading to the Hawkesbury, Illawarra and other places.
Starting point is 02:45:54 But about the end of Governor Burke's term of office, there were no less than 60 square-rigged whalers claiming Sydney as their port. Twelve steamers sailed up and down the coast, 56 vessels arrived from Great Britain, 94 from British colonies, 17 foreign and five from American, giving altogether an aggregate of 67,360 tons. Decidedly, matters were looking up. Emigration too was ever on the increase,
Starting point is 02:46:26 as may be judged from the fact that in 1838, more than 12,000 pounds was realised by the sales of stores from the emigrant ships. We drank chiefly rum and plenty of it. The revenue from its importations totaled 189,450 pounds, and the amount of drink to eight gallons per head per annum. But pew rents in the churches brought in only £6.15 shillings and ninepence. In the same year, as showing how well the government managed to make both ends meet, they had in hands $364,545 pounds, two shillings and sevenpence.
Starting point is 02:47:09 against an outlay of 240,673 pounds, 11 shillings and 8 pence heapenny. They don't bother about odd hapennies nowadays, but the old-fashioned bookkeeping was nothing if not exact. In 36 to 37, the population of Sydney was 19,729 people, made up by 6,794 freemen, 2,2105 boys, 4,000. 4744 free women and 2,209 girls, 2,932 male convicts, and 586 female ones. In the city there were five banks, seven or eight churches or chapels, a couple of insurance companies, three breweries and two distilleries, and still the blacks in purest natural alibus, camped in the streets and on open pieces of ground.
Starting point is 02:48:10 In this connection a schoolmaster makes an amusingly equivocal report upon an Aboriginal pupil who had been sent to him. Says the pedagogue, he shows as much sign of intellect as many of his schoolfellows. Police and jails was a big item in the budget, totalling no less than 52,344 pounds. Miss Ellen is, put shortly, came to 77,585 pounds. People were not nearly so inquisitive then as they are now. Fancy a treasurer calmly presenting such a statement to the tender mercies of the House in this year of grace. Luckily perhaps for some folk who figured in Macellonis,
Starting point is 02:48:57 there was no opposition, at least no legislative opposition, and no matter what went with, he says other, known as the Patriotic Association might think or say, the power to act was as yet denied them. The year 1837 was rendered memorable, among other matters, by the establishment of a new party, consisting entirely of the native-born, and this party it was that took in hand the celebration of the 49th anniversary. They called themselves the United Australians. Their representative was one Richard Driver, who at the time kept a public house,
Starting point is 02:49:38 the three tons, at the corner of King and Elizabeth Streets. He was too the father of a smart lad who became later on pretty widely known both as a lawyer and in the world of politics eventually entering Parliament and joining Parks' cabinet in 1877 Driver's House was the meeting place of the new party who determined to celebrate the anniversary
Starting point is 02:50:03 by a national dinner at the Royal Hotel William Charles Wentworth was to take the chair and their fellow countrymen from all parts of the colony were invited to attend. The festival duly came off, as did the usual speeches and toasts, although the new association does not appear to have introduced any particularly fresh features, except perhaps in the way of a little less harmony. For folk at these gatherings were not any more want to think alike on all political subjects than they are now. On October the 27th, 1837, great news arrived in Sydney.
Starting point is 02:50:44 This was nothing less than the death of William IV and the accession of Queen Victoria to the throne of the United Kingdom. A gazette extraordinary, with a deep mourning border, was at once published announcing the fact, and excitement ran high throughout the city. By public notice the next day, Sir Richard Burke directed that 72-minute guns should be fired from the doors point
Starting point is 02:51:11 battery at noon, that the Royal Standard and the Union Jack should be hoisted half-mast high at the same hour. Also, all the ships in harbour were to observe similar signs of mourning with their flags, whilst the bells of St. James and St.
Starting point is 02:51:27 Phillips were to be told for one hour at sunset that day and an hour at sunrise on the next. All civil officers were to put on mourning, together with everybody else whose situation and circumstances would enable them to do so. Another notice proclaimed that the High and Mighty Princess Alexandrina Victoria had become our only lawful and rightful Leagel Lady Victoria, by the grace of God, etc. To assist in the Declaration of Allegiance, all the high officials of the colony, the clergy, magistrates,
Starting point is 02:52:04 military and naval officers, and the principal inhabitants repaired to government house at midday. Towards the appointed time, Sydney, dressed in its darkest raiment, wended its way towards the old two-story irregular mansion with its wide veranda and one good room. There the 50th regiment, with detachments of the 4th and 80th, was already drawn up. Followed by all the notabilities, the governor, in the full uniform, of a major general, led the way to a table on which was lying the proclamation of Her Majesty's accession, waiting for signature. Sir Richard was the first to sign, followed by the others in their turn. The 14th was Thomas X Tomra, Aboriginal native chief, who thus attached his mark
Starting point is 02:52:57 on the part of the Australian native race. In all there were 126 names, and when the signing was over, the governor, standing on the front doorstep, called for three cheers for the Queen, himself giving the time. Then the troops fired a general salute. The Royal Standard was massed-headed and saluted with 24 guns. More volleys from the troops, more cheering and playing by bands of God Save the Queen, ended not the least of the memorable events that Old Government's House had witnessed, since Johnson and his drunken soldiers routed Bly out of his hiding place in one of its rooms.
Starting point is 02:53:42 Presently the High Sheriff, Thomas McQuoyd, who had, ere this, read the proclamation to the crowd, marshalled a procession that was surpassed from the Government House, down Bridge Street, and up George Street, to the police office, the first ceremony of the kind in Sydney that there is any record of. as in our day is the general rule so now the procession was headed by a detachment of mounted police then came the band and a division of the 50th regiment together with a number of the inhabitants of Sydney members of the bar
Starting point is 02:54:17 the magistrates of the colony commissariat officers clergy the judges followed in order named then came Thomas Tomra A-NC the members of the legislative and executive councils and detachments of the three regiments. Bands played, flags waved everywhere as the procession marched gaily along towards the dingy old central, where the proclamation was again to be read by the High Sheriff. And where one wonders is that most historical documents, sold for waste paper or still preserved
Starting point is 02:54:53 in some cellar for bubonic rats to nest in. Somebody might do worse than hunt it up and have. have reproductions made for the benefit of those of our generation curious in such matters. It runs Proclamation. Whereas it has pleased Almighty God to call to his mercy, our late sovereign Lord King William IV of blessed and glorious memory, by whose decease the imperial crown of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and all other His late Majesty's dominions,
Starting point is 02:55:28 is solely and rightfully come to the high and mighty Princess Alexandrina Victoria, saving the rights of any issue of his late Majesty King William IV, which may be born of his late Majesty's consort. We, the Captain General and Governor-in-Chief of the Territory of New South Wales and its dependencies, the Chief Justice, the members of the Executive Council, the puny judges of the Supreme Court, the members of the Legislature, Legislative Council, the clergy, magistrates, civil officers of the government, and the naval and military officers of Her Majesty's service,
Starting point is 02:56:07 with numbers of other principal inhabitants of the colony. Do now hereby, with one full voice and consent of tongue and heart, publish and proclaim that the high and mighty Princess Alexandrina Victoria is now, by the death of our late sovereign, of happy and glorious memory, become our only lawful and rightful Leag Lady Victoria by the grace of God Queen of the United Kingdom
Starting point is 02:56:35 of Great Britain and Ireland Defender of the Faith Saving As aforesaid Supreme Lady of the Territory of New South Wales and its dependencies To whom Saving as afore said We do acknowledge all faith and constant
Starting point is 02:56:51 obedience with all hearty and humble affection beseeching God, by whom kings and queens do reign, to bless the Royal Princess Victoria with long and happy years to reign over us. Given at the Government House Sydney this 27th day of October, 1837, God save the Queen! signed Richard Burke, Governor-in-chief. Sydney, in these days, was, at the most, only a squalid town, Neither trams nor trains, no corporation, no gas lamps, no drainage, no suburbs worth mentioning,
Starting point is 02:57:34 stumps in the streets and convicts in chains grubbing them, circular key a mud flat, and bullock teams camped alongside the old burial ground, the site of the present town hall. Everything in embryo, and little the few people who listen to those high-sounding words with their quaint turnings, guessed how fully in the long years to come God would grant the request made in that most hearty and loyal prayer delivered in the rude capital of an almost unknown land.
Starting point is 02:58:09 End of Chapter 8. Chapter 9 of Sydney, Past and Present, by John Arthur Barry. This Librivox recording is in the public domain. The early forties As far back as 1826, the lighting of Sydney with gas had been under consideration, but nothing came of the matter, although the then colonial civil engineer, Mr C. Kinghorn,
Starting point is 02:58:41 had prepared a report and estimate of the cost and probable returns of such a scheme. Ten years later, the subject was taken up successfully by the Reverend Ralph Mansfield, already referred to as one-time editor of the Sydney Gazette, who eventually became the founder of the present company, which, in September 1837, obtained its charter for incorporation. But it was four years later, ere the new Illuminants came even into partial use.
Starting point is 02:59:13 At 25 shillings per cubic foot, it was a luxury only accessible to the rich. Now, at four shillings per cubic foot, it is within the reach of most people. In 1838, Sir George Gipps appeared on the scene, in place of one of the muggyz. open-minded, liberal and popular of all the early governors of this colony. And what Sydney thought of the new arrival may be gathered from two lines out of a song, greatly in vogue during his regime. When he eats an orange he'll hand you the pips. They'll grow if you plant them, says Governor Gipps. In 1838, Sydney had its first land boom, nothing very great,
Starting point is 02:59:57 but of interest as a precursor of later and far more disastrous ones. Wool had gone up to over one shilling per pound, and money was so plentiful that land's stock and produce reached unprecedented prices, and speculation, especially in land, grew rampant. The beautiful estate of Hunter's Hill, originally a grant of a thousand acres, also that of Burwood, the story of which has already been told, were put on the market.
Starting point is 03:00:27 Then Abraham Polack, the auctioneer of his day, advertised for sale 94 allotments, a portion of that splendid and unequalled marine estate, known as Vaucluse, the property of WC. Wentworth Esquire. The northern portion adjoining the government's village of Watson's Bay was marked out as a marine village, which, adhering to the government's plan, was named the village of Vaucluse, consisting of 54 allotments of half an acre each, with frontages to correspond and any amount of streets. A thoroughfare named the Village Road,
Starting point is 03:01:06 leading to the South Head Road, was also surveyed. Thirteen of these areas were bounded on the west by Rose Bay, immediately opposite the Marine Villa of Point Piper, the residence of Colonel Gibbs, and so on and so on. The auctioneer, expatiating, as does his prototype of today, with all the eloquence at his command on the wonderful qualities of the property. Various spots on this estate had been for a series of years past, considered by the citizens' favourite ones for picnic parties.
Starting point is 03:01:41 Ship and boat building can here too be carried on at a vast advantage, as a bold shore and deep water bound a great portion of it, in some places sufficient for a 74-gun ship to float alongside. But this scheme, and dozens of others, were years before their time, and ended in such disaster as to ruin many once wealthy citizens, and cripple others to such an extent as to compel them to sell their plate and carriages, some of the latter recognisable later on as comprising part of the first cabstand in Sydney. The site of this was on the south side of Market Street,
Starting point is 03:02:21 opposite to the once well-known Waterloo Warehouse, but it was not until some years afterwards that a genuine handsome appeared on the streets, and this was imported via Melbourne. To emphasise the downfall of the boom, and force people to still further economise, there presently came the drought of 1838 to 1839, when flour rose to over £90 per ton. But the colony was too firmly founded, and its growth of both trade and production already too great for these happenings to do more than momentarily check its prosperity. Says a visitor about this time, there is a fine palace in process of building for his excellency just behind Fort Macquarie.
Starting point is 03:03:09 The inhabitants of Sydney have access to the government domains, and the splendour of carriages and gaiety of promenading parties to be met with here are equal to anything I have seen in Phoenix Park, Hyde Park, Kensington Gardens or even the Tuiery. Our enthusiastic visitor, like so many others who arrived, expecting to find Botany Bay, a mere miserable convict settlement, was evidently so astonished at the contrast between the actual picture and the one that had been present in his imagination
Starting point is 03:03:42 that he gave rather too much rain to his fancy. At the time of his visit, Hyde Park was the fashionable rendezvous for carriage people, as well as the favourite cricket ground. It was then of course treeless, or very nearly so, the grass, tussocky and untended, intersected by pathways and rudely fenced. The Roman Catholic Cathedral had been 16 years in building and was not finished even then.
Starting point is 03:04:12 Behind the old police court, offenders still sat in the stocks, taking out in timber what they couldn't pay in cash. St James's wife. St. James's wife, as it is now, the Government House Church, only then the right-hand gallery was filled with convicts. The new palace for the Governor had been begun some time before this. The plan was designed in London by Mr. E. Blore and its erection entrusted here to Mr. W. Lewis, the colonial architect. Colonial builders contracted for the different portions of the work, and to a great extent the materials
Starting point is 03:04:51 for it were produced within the colony. In the beginning of 38 was opened the Victoria Theatre in Pitt Street, the foundation stone of which had been laid two years previously. It held some 2,000 people, and one of the proprietors, a Mr. Wyatt, on March the 17th, the day of its completion, gave its use gratuitously for a public ball in commemoration of the patron saint of Ireland. A few days afterwards, regular performance,
Starting point is 03:05:22 performances commenced with a good company whose efforts were attended by signal success. The prices of admission were becoming very moderate, dress circle four shillings, upper boxes two shillings and sixpence, pit one shilling, and gallery sixpence. It will be seen that our theatrical caterers have slightly improved on those rates, to say nothing of the early door temptation. The character of the performances, remarked. an early historian, is generally respectable, although we can seldom attempt the higher walks of tragedy, we have yet made successful hits with domestic dramas, comedies and farces.
Starting point is 03:06:05 This is the kind of thing they used to go in for. William Tell, Brutus, Luke the Labourer, the Irish labourer, Hamlet, Macbeth, the Hibernian father, love law and physic, the pilot, Guy Manoring, the Waterman, etc. judging from which selection makes one fancy somehow that, even in these comparatively enlightened days, there was an individual fulfilling as rigid duties of censorship as in those dark ones when Governor Hunter crushed the drama into nothingness with an iron hand. The story of the Old Royal Hotel is of interest, and may here be briefly told. We have already seen how, in the early 30s under Barnett's Levy,
Starting point is 03:06:52 The hotel became a temple of Thespice. But when the new theatre was finished, the actors removed, and the royal took up once more the even tenor of its way as the best house of accommodation in the city. It was managed then by Mr. Sparks and received the chief share of the patronage
Starting point is 03:07:12 of our settlers and squatters, who, on business or pleasure bent, paid their welcome periodical visits to our metropolis. Then, one-seven, of March, a drunken Carter who had been celebrating the Saints Day by drinking and smoking in an adjoining stable, set fire to some straw, which, spreading to the hotel, in a few hours destroyed the big stack of buildings comprising it. A grand ball was taking place at
Starting point is 03:07:42 Government House that night, and many officers rushed out in their gay attire and helped to extinguish the flames. The damage done by the fire was estimated at twenty-thousand, thousand pounds. Presently the site passed from Mr. Wyatt's hands into those of Mr. John Terry Hughes, who upon it built a huge wilderness of stone and wood. Alderman Fowles, once drawing master at Fort Street School, is very severe on the architect. With Mr. Hughes' system of building we are not acquainted, but we presume that he never could have placed upon paper a plan of the immense mass of cumbersomeness which he has piled in George Street. One half of the money wasted thereupon
Starting point is 03:08:28 would have sufficed for a building worthy of the finest street in Europe. Nevertheless, for many years, the Royal continued to be the favourite resort of our settlers and squatters on their visits to Sydney, and even at the present day, it well holds its own with more pretentious and modern competitors. Emigrants from the United Kingdom had, for the past few years been pouring into the colony, and some of the statements sworn to by applicants or
Starting point is 03:08:59 their agents to secure a free passage bear a curious similarity to those made when, at odd times, one of our present's governments sees fit to import a shipload or so of people who will be an acquisition to the colony. Thus one man, stated in his certificate to be a blacksmith, turned out nothing less than a lady's shoemaker, whilst another lot, invoiced by the agent as an agricultural family, proved to be very much otherwise. Said the brother,
Starting point is 03:09:31 I was never an agricultural labourer, I was a clerk in a shipping office. My brother is a draper, my sister never was in service. She left school to come out here as a bounty immigrant. Women of the worst character were encouraged to emigrate under the bounty system.
Starting point is 03:09:50 One woman, for instance, was induced to pass herself off as her son's wife, and one birth had been set aside for them on board ship. Fraud, forgery, impersonation and breach of contract were, in short, the characteristics of a system that poured into Sydney and the colony, a most useless and undesirable class of settlers. Out of 21,126, who arrived in such fashion, no less than 1,395 were found ineligible, and the bounty, £19 per head, refused for them.
Starting point is 03:10:28 It will thus be seen that by a most unfortunate miscarriage of a well-meant system of settlement, the original heavy handicap of convict transportation, now almost at an end, was succeeded by a second invasion of worthless and mischievous, if not actually criminal characters. In the second year of Gipsy's reign, Sydney folk received a surprise, when on rising one morning they perceived two American men of war,
Starting point is 03:10:58 lying snugly among the shipping. These turned out to be a portion of the United States exploring expedition under the command of Captain Wilkes. He had, it seems, made the heads at sunset on the previous evening, and although the night was dark and he had no pilot, the wind being fair, he and the Van Sen of 780 tonnes, accompanied by the peacock of 650 tonnes, stood boldly in under a press of sail.
Starting point is 03:11:29 It seemed a risky thing to do, but he says he knew that he could place absolute reliance on his charts. The sow and pigs seems to have bothered him for a short time, but he soon fixed the position of the reef, and at 10.30pm dropped anchor, in the cove without anyone having the least idea of his arrival. This really was a very fine piece of work, much finer than the lookout kept by those responsible.
Starting point is 03:11:59 Next day, arrived the porpoise and the flying fish, thus making the full strength of the expedition, with whose officers and men the streets of the capital was presently crowded. Later on, Wilkes waited on the governor and apologised for entering the harbour so unceremonial, and without the customary salutes. Reading between the lines, it would almost seem as if the Americans,
Starting point is 03:12:25 having heard of the defences of the harbour and the difficulties of its channels, had determined to show the colonists how small a reliance could be placed on such obstacles when United States ships were in question. One could hardly imagine such a thing happening at the present time. However, the governor was all hospitality, and lent Wilkes Fort Macquarie for the purposes of an observatory.
Starting point is 03:12:52 I may in this place, says our American writer gratefully, acknowledge the open-hearted welcome we met with from all the government officers, military and civil, as well as from the citizens. The Australian Club was thrown open to us by its committee, and parties, balls, etc., were given in our honour. The American commander seems to have been much struck with the press, prevalence of drunkenness, which here stalks abroad at noonday.
Starting point is 03:13:21 It is not rare at any time, but on holidays its prevalence surpasses anything I have ever witnessed. Even persons of the fair sex, if they may be called so, but there to be seen staggering along the most public streets, brawling in the houses, or borne off in charge of the police. The police officers themselves are among the vendors of the intoxicating liquor. Of course he eludes to rum, and it is to be feared that in those days we did indulge rather heavily in our then favourite beverage, judging from the eight gallons per head consumed by the population per annum. In July 1851, the Hunter River Steam Navigation Company, with a capital of £40,000, founded by Mr John Eels of Duckingfield in July 1839, became merged into the ASN Company, with a capital of £320,000.
Starting point is 03:14:21 Early next year, there arrived their first steamer, the Rose, creating quite a sensation in Sydney, although of only 172 tonnes. Then presently came the thistle, and later on, the Shamrock completed the Trinity. Very soon, the company began to extend its operations, and the Shamrock was put into the Morton Bay trade. The fares were £8, £6, and £4 £4, £3 £20 shillings per tonne, and wool £20 shillings per bale.
Starting point is 03:14:56 The business, however, did not pay, and in a few months' time was abandoned. The shareholders, it seemed, objected strongly to the Directorate allowing their boats to travel to such a dangerous place as Morton Bay. A steamer was a steamer in those days, a valuable rara arvice, and if, be taken care of accordingly. We are not quite so particular now, and occasionally send them on far more dangerous adventures than to Morton Bay, e.g., ramming lighthouses, and expeditions in land. A curious controversy arose respecting this pioneer trade of the Shamrock. It seems that the articles of association only provided for voyages to the Hunter River and ports adjacent, and the question was argued as to whether Morton Bay was or was not adjacent to the hunter.
Starting point is 03:15:49 Mr Broadhurst, QC and several nautical experts were set to work on the question and the latter at any rate gave it as their opinion that Brisbane and Newcastle were adjacent. This clenched the matter and determined the directors to persevere. Accordingly, we later find the sovereign trading to Morton Bay and the Shamrock to Melton. The first-named vessel was afterwards wrecked with the loss of 44 lives. These developments of our present great coasting service are too intimately bound up with the rise and progress of Sydney to be passed over without at least brief mention. Before leaving the last of our 30s for good, a word must be said respecting the first Jubilee, as well as the 50th anniversary, both happening in that year,
Starting point is 03:16:42 and the native born determined to keep them up in right good fashion. In the first place, they made up their minds that the day should be a public holiday, which it had never been before. Then, that there should be a regatta for the masses, as well as a dinner for the classes. They had their way in both instances. There was a regatta, and the committee hired a steamer and sold tickets to their friends to see the races from it.
Starting point is 03:17:10 Also, in the evening they had a dinner at the Pulton Hotel in Bent Street, afterwards the Australian Clubhouse, and now Richmond House, used as a boarding establishment. The guests sat down at seven. Tickets were £2-shillings, and we may be quite certain that the celebration was worthy of the, for the times, rather high figure. During 37 to 38, a parliamentary committee had given in a strong refilings, port, thoroughly adverse to transportation, and the appalling evidence collected by it, respecting the system, had completely swayed English opinion against its continuance, so far at least as New South Wales was concerned.
Starting point is 03:17:58 In that colony, however, it was feared at first by the large landholders, that, having to do without convict labour, spelled ruin. But they had to decide, and were given their choice between a assigned servants and self-government. It was preposterous that a convict colony should be permitted to rule itself. That was self-evident, so the choice was soon made, and in 1840 a British ordering council established Tasmania and Norfolk Island as the only two convict settlements in Australasia.
Starting point is 03:18:34 And thus it happened that in October 1840, the last convict ship but won, the Eden, let's go her anchor in Port Jackson, and though for many years the system left broad traces across the social features of the colony, it's practically received its death blow when the cables of the Eden rushed through her horse pipes into the waters of Sydney Harbour. In 1841, we had our first recorded embezzlement
Starting point is 03:19:03 by a high official, and it was such a bare-faced and impudent robbery, and created such a tremendous scandal, that it is worth noticing. The first registrar of the Supreme Court had been a certain Colonel Galway Mills described as a decayed gentleman with no knowledge of business.
Starting point is 03:19:25 To make up for this, however, his successor proved to have rather too much. After becoming a bankrupt in England and taking advantage of the Insolvent Act, this gentleman had, in 1828, been appointed Chief Justice of Not Nova Scotia. This billet he was permitted to exchange for the position of registrar of the Supreme Court of New South Wales, with the duty of collecting the effects of intestates, and, according to his own story,
Starting point is 03:19:56 the privilege of investing the money for his benefit, pending distribution. Then, whilst he entirely neglected all other parts of his work, he, in defiance of son, brother, father, or other near relatives of the deceased, grasped the whole estate, invested it in his own name, for his own interest, and for ten years kept neither daybook, cash book nor ledger, kept only one account at his bank, rendered no statement for audit to anyone, and paid what balances he pleased to next of kin. So notorious did this business at last become that he was out of eye,
Starting point is 03:20:35 asked to pass his accounts and generally clear up matters. But at this he waxed indignant and protested that the judges were reacting on his honour by calling for any such statements, and thus depriving him of the legitimate profits to be derived from the employment of other men's money which had induced him to settle in the colony. Even now, for a piece of cool effrontery,
Starting point is 03:21:00 the above would be hard to beat. Eventually, finding the judges for, in their demand for an audit, he resorted to open fraud and in two years appropriated £9,000. Then he became bankrupt, took the benefit of the Act for the second time, and after a while, paid a dividend of sixpence in the pound. His victims petitioned the Home Government for compensation, but without success. It should have been mentioned that at the audit he reported himself to be in possession only of 1,989 pounds, 17 shillings
Starting point is 03:21:40 and a heapenny, but the court found that 3,085 pounds, 18 shillings and tuppence was the amount he ought really to have had in hand. And this, in spite of a violent resistance, they compelled him to disgorge. However, as we have seen,
Starting point is 03:21:58 he lost no time in recouping himself. The incident is of interest, as showing how in those years it was not difficult for an English official, even with a shady reputation, to procure a position of high trust out here and shake the Australian Pagoda tree to such good purpose as did our Horty Second Registrar.
Starting point is 03:22:21 Such instances of peculation on a large scale, however, must have been rare, or this one would not have attracted the attention it did. A few such gentry would have soon caused a vacuum in the colonial treasury, Our treasury, by the way, was, in those days, an unpretentious building, the last but one or two of those old-fashioned houses on the left-hand side of Church Hill, going towards York Street, and now the office of the Freeman's Journal.
Starting point is 03:22:51 Quiet as it is now, that neighbourhood saw stirring times, when the four-horse coach carrying gold came in from the Turon, Abercrombie, or Auraluan, and dashed up in fine style, with its armed effort, escort of troopers cantering alongside and others sitting on the box and in the body of the vehicle. In the early 50s, the arrival of a gold escort, judging from old pictures, was one of the sites of the capital. In this year, 1841, a census was taken, and with rather surprising results, for it was found that the population of the colony amounted to no less than 130,700, Males 87,200.
Starting point is 03:23:39 Females, 43,500. Of this number, Sydney is credited with between 40 and 50,000. But the year appears to have been a bad one. Governor Gipps took to juggling with the land, alternately raising and depressing the price per acre. Indeed, he at one stroke raised the upset price from five shillings to 12 shillings. After a while he lowered it again,
Starting point is 03:24:08 thus causing much uncertainty and financial distress on the part of the holders. Thus many became insolvent, and things generally with most settlers were at sixes and sevens. City lands, however, was steadily increasing in value. In 1834, a corner allotment in George Street had been sold at the rate of 18,150 pounds per acre, and another at the rate of 27,928 pounds per acre. Ten years or so earlier, they might have been purchased for a few hundred gallons of rum.
Starting point is 03:24:47 In 1840, one small lot brought at the rate of £40,000 per acre. It will thus be seen that speculation had not been quite crushed by the disasters of the recent land boom and the drought, and that investors had full faith in the future of the sea. city, both as regarded it and its suburbs, especially choice spots such as rush-cutters and Elizabeth Bays, which were becoming favourite residential sites. Listen to Mr Stubbs, the auctioneer of the day, as he descants on the beauty of these places. Pollock isn't in it with him.
Starting point is 03:25:25 Of all the cherished objects of an amateur's delight, those most preferred beyond all others of our beautiful harbour are Elizabeth and Rushcutter's Bay. It is proverbial that every fresh visit to these beautiful spots only increases the desire of seeing them again. Hence it is that hardly an individual moves out of town, but he goes for the enjoyment of his health to one of them. To live there is at once judgment and good taste. Not to be there is a continually increasing want.
Starting point is 03:26:00 Later on, speaking of Rushcutter's Bay, he eulogises it as, really and truly the tout ensemble of good society. The worthy auctioneer might have added that the society was limited as well, for save private residences about Darling Point, Double Bay and Point Piper, there were scarcely a house all the way to the heads. Not unmindful of thoroughly sound business ethics, Mr Stubbs announces on a more than usually important occasion, a champagne lunch will be provided on the day of sale.
Starting point is 03:26:38 End of Chapter 9 Chapter 10 of Sydney Past and Present By John Arthur Barry This Librevox recording is in the public domain. In the 40s In 1842, Sydney was formed into a municipality and the first election of councillors, aldermen, etc, took place on November 1st in that year.
Starting point is 03:27:09 The house used for the meetings of the New Town Council was one built by Mr. Commissary Broughton about the year 1813 on the site of a row of soldiers' huts, known by the expressive name of the rookery. The building, often referred to in these papers, was afterwards the residence of the first colonial secretary, Major Gulban.
Starting point is 03:27:31 Then it was occupied by Mr. Sidney Stephen, then it became a hotel which was called the Pulteney and was kept by Mr Levyon. It is now known as Richmond House, already mentioned as a boarding establishment, and as being the first quarters of the Australian club. But the town council in those days was of an eminently migratory character. At one time it held its meetings in York Street, near where the old Masonic Hall now stands. Thence it wandered to the Oxford Hotel in King Street, Then we find it in a house on the site of the Imperial Hotel in Wyniard Square,
Starting point is 03:28:10 resting finally in a building on the opposite side, whence in 1879 it removed to its present quarters. Alderman John Hoskins was the first mayor, and Mr John Ray, the first town clerk, appointed in 1843. This gentleman afterwards became well known as undersecretary for Public Works and Commissioner for Railroad. The corporation managed to scrape along in some sort of fashion for 11 years, but in 1854, it got into an even worse muddle than our late city fathers did, and the government found it
Starting point is 03:28:48 necessary to place the affairs of the city in the hands of commissioners, who levied rates and paid off the overdraft. They were three in number. Mr. Ray was the junior, his colleagues being Messrs Gilbert Elliott and Frederick Orm Darnow. In 1857, the council again became an institution, with what measure of success was well disclosed by the happenings of 1901. In the latter forties, a visitor to Sydney remarks, the town councillors will do well to follow the more decorous example set by their seniors in the mother country,
Starting point is 03:29:26 and it is to be hoped that, hereafter, they will not be quite so personal in their own. observations to each other, as some of them were last year. Such were then the proceedings, that people actually compared the town hall to a bear garden. So we see that even over half a century ago, our city council was doing its best to live up to the reputation it has until quite recently done its very best to maintain. Although Governor Gipps had not as yet taken full possession of his grand new house, Still, on May the 24th, 1843, he opened a portion of it, including the ballroom,
Starting point is 03:30:10 and gave a fine entertainment in that apartment in honour of Her Majesty's birthday. Says an old writer enthusiastically of the new structure, May the solidity, the splendour and elegance of this vice-royal mansion be an emblem of Australia's future history, separated as we are by continents and oceans from our fatherland we have yet the pride of the British born to rear in their land such buildings as their sons may be proud to contemplate structures so firm and enduring that the storm may shake but cannot destroy
Starting point is 03:30:46 the cost when completed was it is said well into fifty thousand pounds although the first estimates was only for half that sum The stables are ornate to a degree and have time and again been mistaken for the residential portion of the house. Indeed, an English magazine once illustrated them as a few of the seat of government in New South Wales. At this first ball, just mentioned,
Starting point is 03:31:16 it rained in torrents during the evening and night, and, as at that period, the sheltering porch in front of the house had not been built, the approach became a regular bog, The ladies got their dresses soiled, and in the morning dozens of boots and shoes were seen sticking in the mud. Not until 1845 was the building finally occupied as a home by the governor. Just a few words about the often debated matter of these different government houses and their sights. We have long ago described Phillips' portable canvas house,
Starting point is 03:31:54 originally built in England by one Smith of St George's Fields under the personal direction of the governor and at a cost of £125. Supposing that it counted as the first government's house, temporary though it was, its position, judging from Hunter's well-known picture, must have been somewhere close to the place where the copper plate was recently found
Starting point is 03:32:18 embedded in old foundation stones at a depth of three feet six inches, under the pavement at the corner of Philippine Bridge Streets. And where the discovery was made is undoubtedly the exact site of the second and permanently built government house, and probably the first building in Australia to be made of bricks and stones.
Starting point is 03:32:41 Says Collins, they're having been found among the convicts, a person qualified to conduct the business of a brickmaker, a gang of labourers was put under his direction. Another gang of labourers was put under the direction of a stone mason and on the 15th of May 1788 the first stone of a building intended for the residence of the governor until the government's house could be erected
Starting point is 03:33:07 was laid on the east side of the cove. The projected building spoken of above was to have been on Church Hill and as nearly as can be gathered on the ground where Petty's hotel now stands. To return to the Bridge Street Government House on number two, if we count it the next, its first contained only three rooms, but were subsequently enlarged to six. It was of one story, and although mention is made of a set of stairs, it is uncertain where they led to, perhaps to a loft or an attic. Contemporary pictures of the place show a wretched-looking sort of a hut
Starting point is 03:33:47 with a hip roof, a door flanked by two windows of unequal size, and a chimney at one end, and yet they called it elegant, which, perhaps, compared with its surroundings, it really was. However, it only lasted ten years, and then, finding his home threatens at any moment to fall and bury him in its ruins, Governor Hunter in 1799,
Starting point is 03:34:13 pulled it down and rebuilt it a little further along Bridge Street. This number three contained a drawing room, 50 feet by 18 feet, a dining room 30 feet by 18 feet 6 inches, and a parlor 20 feet by 16 feet 6 inches. The rooms were 9 feet, 11 feet and 7 feet in height, and this edifice transformed by Macquarie into a comfortable sort of country house with deep verandas, served vice-royalty as a home until the present building in the domain. was occupied by Governor Gipps. Thus it may be fairly said that there were in all four government houses, and it is thought that in the preceding brief account several vexed questions as to their sights, etc., have been correctly settled. Some details of our city in these early forties will be of interest to the present generation,
Starting point is 03:35:12 as well as to the gradually dwindling remnant who can let their recollections carry back to the days of their youth and reconstruct the scenes among which those days were spent. Around the cove itself, the changes have been slighter since we last to glanced at it than in other parts of the town, and the new government house dominates the landscape,
Starting point is 03:35:34 standing out big and white above the surrounding trees. The commissariat stores still usurp the site of the sailors' home and the mariners' church. Ships still lie off, from the shore and are approached by heavy stages 40 or 50 in length, circular key being yet in embryo, and all the work of reclamation only just thought of again. At the foot of George Street is a flight of steps where watermen ply for hire.
Starting point is 03:36:04 Looking across to north shore, scarcely anything but a dense mass of thick forest met the eye, Eucalypti and Banksia, practically unchanged since that day in 1789. when poor Francis Hill, the midshipman of the Sirius, landed at Milton's point and was lost in trying to get through the scrub to his ship, then hoved down in careening cove. Nor despite many days of search was he ever heard of again.
Starting point is 03:36:36 From the cove, uptown, there were still plenty of open spaces. A Mr James Underwood owned a big slice of land extending from the Herald office right to the water's edge. and on this grant he built not only houses known as Underwood's buildings, but also, in 1801, that's first Australian ship, the King George, before referred to in the course of this book. Probably she was put together somewhere about the site of the present Paragon Hotel. The jail was still in George Street, and the gallows stood on a hill at the back of it, where now is Prince's Street.
Starting point is 03:37:15 The military barracks filled Wyniard Squirrel, in the very heart of the town. The main building faced the east and extended along York Street from Margaret Street to Barrack Street. The officer's quarters were in separate houses at each end. For some hundreds of yards,
Starting point is 03:37:34 a high wall shut off the barracks from George Street. Out on a sandhill where Paddington is now, new barracks were in course of erection, having for outlook a dreary expanse of swamp and tea tree scrub. Between Hamilton and Pitt streets, there were no buildings at all, and standing on the banks of the tank stream, you could see across to the back premises of the houses in George Street.
Starting point is 03:38:01 In Bridge Street, on the site of the premises until lately occupied by the Union Steamship Company, was a big lumberyard, and in one of these detached houses which stood rather back from the street, once resided the Chief Justice Sir Francis Forbes, and then, for many years, it gave accommodation for business matters connected with the survey department. Fine trees grew in front of the houses, which, with the buildings they beautified, have long since disappeared, the former before the acts of the Vandals, who in turn have ruled our city, the latter to make room for some modern edifices.
Starting point is 03:38:44 The government's printing office consisted of some old wooden buildings in Bent Street, and close to these too with the structures used as an emigration depot. The emigrants, however, when the prisoners were shifted from Hyde Park barracks, took possession of that place. In those days the buildings so well known to us as Fort Street Model School was the military hospital. Opposite the main entrance to the military barracks in George Street was an old-fashioned a massive stone house, standing at a distance from the public road and contained within railings.
Starting point is 03:39:22 This was the second bank of New South Wales, and its garden bordered the tank stream. Then, a little further to the south, stood the old General Post Office. George Street was, of course, the great main artery, as it is today, and it extended from Doors Point the northern extremity of the city to the old toll bar opposite the benevolent asylum at the southern end, a distance of about two miles. Then, for another mile, it went under the name of Parramatta Street, connecting the extensive and popular suburbs of Chippendale and Redfern with the city,
Starting point is 03:40:01 and forming a grand approach from the southern and western districts. Says good old fowls, writing later on, the newcomer cannot fail to be surprised with the bustle and animation that pervades this street, George. Numberless omnibuses in constant motion, hackney carriages, coaches, gigs, wagons, and every description of vehicle from the humble shake-heart to the regular four in hand,
Starting point is 03:40:30 passing and repassing, with now and then a big bullock dray laden with wool or other produce, and drawn by eight or ten immense bullocks, wending its devious way to the merchant's stores, gives character to the scene and stamps it to colonial. Hyde Park was still more generally known as the race course, and was simply a healthy, open common, fenced off in four different departments.
Starting point is 03:40:59 Lions Terrace stood on the south side of the park, and was considered the residential plumber of the city. There were six houses in it, and among the early occupants at different intervals were General Wyniard, the colonial treasurer C.D. Riddle, J. Thacker, W. H. Hart, manager of the Bank of Australia, Chief Justice Stephen, and A.W. Young, the sheriff of the colony. The rent of these select and fashionable residences was from £280 to £400 per annum. At the corner of Elizabeth Street was a large house occupied by Mr Prosper de Mestre,
Starting point is 03:41:39 part owner of a whaler, the Cape Packet, and mentioned by Lang, as a highly respectable merchant of American origin who has long settled in Sydney. On the east side of the park stood the Sydney College, nearly alone and now flourishing under its first headmaster, Mr. T. Cape. Near Governor Burke's statue stood the ugly school of industry, and at the corner of King Street the now vanished St. James Parsonage. Crown Street boasted of some four or five houses only. Redfern was practically unknown till some years later as a residential suburb,
Starting point is 03:42:20 when Fowles speaks of it as extensive and populous. MacDonald Town and the present up-the-line suburbs were of course undreamt of, although a Mr Chisholm had a house in the neighbourhood of the former place, standing on land long since resumed by the government for railway purposes. Afterwards it was occupied as a school by Dr. Sly. Oxford Street, and were generally known as New South Head Road, was still the favourite drive with many of the citizens, but there were no houses along it.
Starting point is 03:42:55 The new courthouse at Darlinghurst was still unfinished, although one wing was utilised as a museum, with Mr Wall as curator. And in this most unsuitable place, a gradually increasing collection of fine and valuable specimens remained until 1849 when they were removed to the present building designed by the colonial architect, Mr. M. W. Lewis. But from beginning to end, the contract appears to have been muddled, money wasted, and such a scandal incurred has caused the retirement of the colonial
Starting point is 03:43:31 architect from his office. And at Waverly, there was only one house, a lofty conspicuous building, but by whom occupied contemporary history is silent, although in recent years it did duty as a Roman Catholic school. Messrs R. Cooper, T. Cape, F. Healy, and several other prominent citizens lived in the neighbourhood of the Glenmore Road. Paddington, Woolara, Waverley and Randwick were still in the womb of futurity. The Edgecliff Road and its fellows of the present were so many rude and scarcely defined tracks, nameless and formed by cattle and by wood carters among the scrubby areas interspersed with patches of rock and sand worthless then almost invaluable now
Starting point is 03:44:22 at double bay a solitary fisherman had built himself a hut whilst under a projecting shelf of flat rock on the eastern side two old soldiers had taken up their quarters they were known simply by the nicknames of albuera and waterloo William Street was a sandy dray track and a little creek where the asylum for the blind now stands was spanned by a couple of decayed rails off which unweary foot passengers now and again plumped into the water. Dr Polding, the Roman Catholic bishop, lived in a large house standing alone on the open stretch of ground between William Street and the head of Woolumaloo Bay.
Starting point is 03:45:06 But gradually, as we have seen, the rich city folk were being enticed to make their homes around the foreshores of these bays, and already many fine mansions standing in extensive grounds dotted the highlands of this portion of the harbour. But so dense was the scrub, particularly about Elizabeth and Rushcutters, that much clearing was necessary before one of these old-time homes and its surroundings was completed. Returning to the neighbourhood of the cove, it may be of interest, to some of the people who daily pass the obelisk in Macquarie Place to reproduce the inscription it bears,
Starting point is 03:45:46 as it stands there forlorn and solitary, in that most squalid and dirty patch of Old Sydney, surrounded by rags, torn newspapers, decaying leaves, garbage and refuse of all descriptions, an ancient but nonetheless eloquent protest against the ineptitude of these under whose care the historic space should by rights flourish in turf and blossom. The inscription runs on the south side.
Starting point is 03:46:15 This obelisk was erected in Macquarie Place, AD 1818, to record that all the public roads leading to the interior of the colony are measured from it, Governor L. Macquarie, Esquire. On the north side, Principal Roads, Distance, Sydney to Bathurst, 187 miles Sydney to Windsor 35 and a half miles
Starting point is 03:46:42 Sydney to Parramatta 15 and a half miles Sydney to Liverpool 20 miles to Macquarie Tower at South Head 7 miles 14 miles The first milestone is still to be seen at the corner of Liverpool
Starting point is 03:47:01 and George streets And the second a little way beyond the new town road by the side of the university grounds. The obelisk is said to have been erected by one Edward Cawton, a free man, and to have cost about £45. Reference has in the course of these papers been often made to the site of what is commonly accepted as the original Bank of New South Wales, the one in front of the barracks in George Street and close to the General Post Office. But few people, even among the earlier historians appear to know quite where the first bank stood, long before its quarters were removed
Starting point is 03:47:43 to the old-fashioned George Street cottage, with its curious arched windows, garden and orchard, and hut for the night watchman, who, with slug-loaded blunderbuss, lay in wait for illegal exploiters of the bank's treasure. Through the kindness of the Honourable Reginald Black MLC, the writer has been enabled to identify the house, in which, on April the 8th,000, 1817, the young institution began its long and successful career. At the corner of Pitt Street and a Macquarie Place stand the offices of the North Queensland Insurance Company, and next to them, partly hidden by a fruiterers shop and a tobacconists,
Starting point is 03:48:25 rises an old weather-worn building, and in this, known afterwards as the Star Hotel, the present great corporation began its operations. Unless one knows just where to look for it, the house is hardly distinguishable, so hemmed in is it by others. In those days, there was a well-in Macquarie place where, when, as it often did in a dry season,
Starting point is 03:48:51 the tank stream failed, the bank officials had to go for their water. Busby's bore was not yet in existence, but later on it for many years was, as already mentioned, the sole water supply of the city. The bore was in reality an aqueduct of over two miles in length, cut from the Lochland swamp near botany. The channel was five feet deep and five feet wide,
Starting point is 03:49:17 having its terminus in Hyde Park, where the folks used to go and fetch the water in tubs, buckets, carts, anything, and the supply was intermittent, giving out when least expected. In course of time, water was laid on through pipes to many houses, but it came through very slowly and to fill a bath often took three hours when people indulged in a home luxury of the kind. Throughout the city there were at this time
Starting point is 03:49:47 wells of varying depth. The one in particular in Macquarie Place was declared to be very sweet and there was another just opposite the old clubhouse in Bent Street, the water of which was held in high repute. In this particular chapter, dealing as it does, so largely with the old topography of our city,
Starting point is 03:50:10 it must be remembered that although every possible effort has been made to confirm and verify the statements contained therein, such a question as the absolute position of a long-departed landmark must in many cases be a matter far from reducible to the dimensions of an exact science, and therefore a certain amount of approximate correctness must be allowed in such matters. And it is curious how, in this respect, the old chronicles and records do themselves differ. In some instances, even no-to being agreed upon matters of position, custom or fashion, that we who are interested in such things deem of much moment.
Starting point is 03:50:52 Nor, when one comes to think of it, is this so very surprising? Take, for instance, our ever-changing city of today, and it will not be difficult to find three average men, who will in no wise be able to agree as to the shape, use and exact position of a building which they had passed every day of their lives for many years, then had, as it were, suddenly missed, and found its place taken by a stranger. And so, with many other matters that will be of interest to our dependence, but which no man among us considers worthy of note at the present.
Starting point is 03:51:32 End of chapter 10 Chapter 11 of Sydney Past and Present by John Arthur Barry This Librivox recording is in the public domain In the 40s continued It was on the 24th of January 1843 that Sir George Gipps, acting then as president of the council, addressed the members to the effect that their existence as a council was almost at an end, seeing that the British Parliament had at last passed, an act which made that body elective.
Starting point is 03:52:12 Thus the Year of Grace 1843 saw the partial death of the nominee system and the birth of one based on the will of the people, partial because the nominee leavened still obtained to the extent that six of the members were to be government officials and six others appointed directly by the governor himself. The people were allowed 24 representatives whose qualifications were either the possession of freehold valued at £200 per annum, or a fixed income of £20 per annum,
Starting point is 03:52:43 derived from a residential source. Of these, six were to represent Port Phillip and 18 New South Wales. The voting was of course open and the state of the poll was declared every hour, as nearly as might be. The first election in our city is worthy of rather more than a general notice. Somewhere, as near as possible on the site of Thomas Mort's statue in Macquarie Place, the witness of so many historic scenes, was the spot chosen for the first nomination for the city electorate, which resulted in the return of Messrs Wentworth and Bland. And here the former made that unequivocal declaration that probably placed him at the top of the pole,
Starting point is 03:53:29 to the effect that either William Charles Wentworth was unworthy to represent Sydney, or Sydney was unworthy of being represented by William Charles Wentworth. To posterity he left the deciding question. Between the partisans of these two men and those of other candidates, of whom the principal were Robert Cooper, Captain O'Connell and William Hustler, feeling was rather strained, and encounters were consequently more or less serious throughout the day, which gave Captain Innes, the then-police magistrate
Starting point is 03:54:03 and his men all they knew to suppress. The crowd started for Miller's Point and travelled along Kent Street via Charlotte's Place to Smith's Corner in Market Street, just about the sight of the present Kidman's buildings. Smith was a popular sport of the time and kept a large butcher's shop. There, so the story goes,
Starting point is 03:54:26 on one of the mob attempting to pull up some palings from the fence that then bounded a cottage garden opposite, a woman rushed out and cut off his fingers with a meatax. And curiously enough, whether a fact or not, the writer happening to sit quite recently next to an old gentleman in one of the George Street electric trams heard him relating the story as having been himself an actual witness of the occurrence. With the addition, however, that next morning there appeared in one of the newspapers
Starting point is 03:54:56 an advertisement to the effect that the victim could have the missing digits returned on personal application. When the crowd reached Haymarket, it attempted to rush the polling place there, and, by destroying the voting papers, at least delay the election. These ruffs carried polls decked with green ribbons, and were simply spoiling for a fight
Starting point is 03:55:21 with Wentworthites or Blandites. The attempt on the papers was frustrated by the presence of mind of a clerk, who, having one of hustlers' placards, shouted that if they destroyed the papers, they would do as much harm to their own side as to the opposition, whereupon they gave cheers for hustler and rioted away to Hyde Park. During the afternoon there was a fight near St James's Church,
Starting point is 03:55:47 and Captain Innes and some of the police were chased into the adjacent barracks, where they took refuge. But despite all opposition, Wentworth and Bland, were easily first when the final count came. Shortly afterwards, Parramatta had its turn. Mr Charles Cooper, a son of the Archdeacon, had been beaten for Camden by Mr. Roger Therry, afterwards the well-known judge.
Starting point is 03:56:13 So his supporters determined to give him a show for Cumberland. Time was short at the opposition candidate, James MacArthur, strong and influential. The excitement was at fever heat, and although people felt that the Sydney vote was secure for Cooper, the MacArthur connection and influence amid the strongholds of the family was too strong to allow very much hope.
Starting point is 03:56:38 Towards evening people began to muster around the committee rooms, situated in a new building where Lassiter's ironmongery department stands now, for it was known that Cooper would ride in from Parramatta with the final polling from that town and the neighbourhood. Crowds filled the haymarket
Starting point is 03:56:56 and George Street was impassable, so that when, very late, distant cheering was heard, his committee could not get out to discover the cause. However, they presently saw Cooper borne aloft on six men's shoulders, and after a time he was landed safely among them, having beaten MacArthur by 132 votes.
Starting point is 03:57:18 And thus was the future Sir Charles Cooper introduced to Australian political life, after a struggle, the keenness and bitterness of which we, at this latter day, find it rather hard to realize. Pretty certain as we are that by no efforts of our own
Starting point is 03:57:34 can we change the dreary level of mediocrity that has for years distinguished each legislative seesaw in the representative chamber. As going to show the insecurity of life and property in Sydney in 1844, two instances may here be given of the cool brutality and heartlessness
Starting point is 03:57:54 that characterised the criminal class that still made up the great part of the population of the city. In the early part of the year, a ticket of leave man from Norfolk Island went into the shop of a poor old widow woman at the corner of Kent and Margaret streets, and asked to be served with some trifling article. Whilst Mrs Jameson was serving him, the scoundrel split her head open with a tomahawk. She lingered a few days and then died, leaving two orphaned children. The murderer, John Nachbull, was what to be what was known as a gentleman convict, that is, well-connected at home.
Starting point is 03:58:35 Indeed, his brother, Sir Edward Nachbull, on hearing of the occurrence, sent out a sum of money to be invested for the benefit of the orphans. Strong efforts were also made to get the murderer off, and he was defended by Robert Lowe, afterwards Lord Sherbrooke, who then lived in Macquarie Street opposite the old school of industry, and whose wife, it is said, eventually took charge of Mrs. Jameson's children, a girl and a boy, and had them brought up respectively. But although the plea of insanity was set up, the man's record was so bad that he was condemned to death and hanged in due course. The proceeds of his crime amounted to three shillings and sixpence. Then, in the May of the same year, there happened another and an equally cold-blooded murder.
Starting point is 03:59:23 one Sunday evening Mr Noble, a general estate agent and a well-known and respected citizen, was sitting reading the Bible aloud to his wife and her sister when three men entered, one of whom snapped a pistol at Mr. Noble's head. That gentleman turned and grappled with his assailant. The women screamed, and two of the fellows escaped by the back door. But Mr. Noble, forced to release the first one he had seized, now collared another and held him until assistance arrived. Not till then was noble found to have been stabbed in the stomach.
Starting point is 04:00:01 The wound proved mortal, and the unfortunate man died in two days. The captive, Martin, turned a prover, and presently the others, vigors and burdette, were captured, tried, and of course duly hanged. But what made the citizen so excited over this affair was the fact that the three criminals, all Norfolk Island convicts, but actually under-sentence in Hyde Park barracks
Starting point is 04:00:27 when they escaped and murdered poor noble. It seems that, as they were entering St. Phillips on that Sunday, they had slipped out of the gang, and having plain suits concealed under their branded ones had soon transformed themselves into free men, and without the delay of a minute, recommenced their career of crime by a most barbarous murder. then, of course, people wanted to know something about the state of discipline in a jail where such goings on were possible.
Starting point is 04:00:58 And finally, on the motion of Dr Nicholson, a select committee of the Legislative Council was appointed to inquire into the condition both of the Sydney Police and the High Park barracks, also to consider the expediency of remonstrating against the introduction of Norfolk Island expireses into the colony. Long ago, a price list of necessaries, etc, in the early days, was quoted in this book. It will perhaps be of interest to contrast them with a few figures from 1844 to 1845. The Australasian sugar refining company then had their works at Canterbury, about six miles from Sydney, beyond the pleasant suburbs of Newtown, and for their produce they asked for fine loaves on the spot, 4 pence hapenny per pound. Ditto for exportation.
Starting point is 04:01:52 Fourpence heapney per pound free on board. Crushed lump, 40 shillings per hundredweight. Fine pieces, 30 shillings to 36 shillings per hundred weight. Molasses, none. And the above list is signed, E. Knox manager. T was still a luxury at from four shillings and sixpence to five shillings and sixpence per pound. Flower of the best quality was nine pounds. pounds per ton. Butchers meat of every kind was plentiful and the very best description.
Starting point is 04:02:24 Beef, a penny hapony per pound retail, mutton, tuppence to tuppence heapenny, pork, fourpence to fivepence pence, veal, fourpence heapney to fivepence heapney. Bread was tuppens heapenie the two pound loaf. Grapes of the finest kinds were threepence per pound, but bananas were looked upon as something of a luxury, though plentiful at two shillings per dozen. Peaches sold from fourpence to one shilling per basket. Of what size is not stated, but, judging from the description of the plenteous crop, probably a clothes basket. Walt Hall's best colonial tobacco was one and sixpence per pound,
Starting point is 04:03:06 other sorts down to eightpence. House rent was considered high, 30 pounds per annum being paid for a small, cottage in an unfavourable situation. Time, says an old writer, will, however, certainly remedy this evil, in which statement he had not been so thoroughly borne out as one might altogether wish. Until the last few years, imprisonment for debt still formed part of the law of the land, but that was now abolished, and the debtor's prison, situated close to the treadmill
Starting point is 04:03:42 at the corner of Pitt and Gipps streets was untenanted. At one time, on payment of five shillings a week, any creditor could keep his unfortunate victim walking the rules for life if he so pleased. But that was all over now, and by virtue of an insolvency act passed in these early forties,
Starting point is 04:04:03 many hundreds of people had been released. Brame, walking out of town by the road leading to the interior of the country, found the old building standing in solitary and untenanted gloom. It appears to frown now on the barbarism which could perpetuate this custom so long and extend it so far, while some beautiful roses and plants blooming in the front
Starting point is 04:04:28 speak eloquently of the blooming of brighter days. Originally the place was intended and used as a boy's penitentiary, something after the fashion of our carpentarian reformatory, where the youthful offenders were taught useful trades and otherwise reclaimed. Then, at a period when public works were being rapidly erected, it was used as quarters for the government carters, and from this cause, for a long time, retained the name of Carter's barracks. Close to the site of the present house in Macquarie Street,
Starting point is 04:05:04 there stood in 1843, a mean-looking little building, in which the old council used to meet. and here, in a stuffy close room, the governor, with the nominee members around him, sat at a table and discussed matters of state and the affairs of the colony. When, however, the new constitution came into being, the place was found far too small to accommodate the 36 representatives, to say nothing of a stranger's gallery, committee rooms, etc. There was, however, no money to spare just then for anything grand in the way of a new chamber,
Starting point is 04:05:41 Also, Governor Gipps, true to his economical instinct, set his face against any decent expenditure, so he told the colonial architect to do the job as cheaply as he could, with the result that the present barracks were run up in six months, looking exactly exteriorly as we see them today, but of course with many improvements inside. Macquarie would have given us a palace ugly enough perhaps, but, like everything else, he put his hand to, massive and enduring.
Starting point is 04:06:15 He was no jerry-builder, and therefore none of his work is contemptible, like that ramshackle erection approved of Gipps, and which has cost us almost as much in repairs as would suffice to build another Victoria markets. Notable among the buildings begun and completed, or nearly so during the reign of Gipps, was the Roman Catholic Church of St. Patrick, built by subscription, assisted by a grant of £1,000 from the state. The first stone was laid on August 25th, 1840, by the Archbishop Dr. Polding, in person,
Starting point is 04:06:55 and four years later was dedicated by him, although the interior was not finished for some time afterwards. The first Jewish synagogue was also built at a cost of £3,600. pounds. Up till then, the Jews had no recognised place of worship, used indeed to meet in a private house, that of Mr. P.J. Cohen in Jameson Street, offered by him for the purpose. Later on, as their numbers increased, they took possession of a large room on the northern side of Bridge Street, afterwards used as a store by a Mr. Gordon. Then, towards the end of 1841, A site in York Street was purchased at auction, a synagogue built, and in 1844, consecrated with all the ceremonies usual upon such an occasion.
Starting point is 04:07:47 When Dr. Polding, the first Roman Catholic bishop of Australia, went home in 1840, and was created an archbishop, he ordered a peal of bells. They did not arrive, however, for two years. Then a belfry was erected for them, and they ushered in the new year of 1843 with their music, the first of the kind that the currency lads and lasses had ever heard. Although churches of the established faith were plentiful enough at this date, we had as yet only the beginnings of a cathedral to boast of. There was, however, close to the site of the present edifice,
Starting point is 04:08:27 a parish church of St Andrews, capable of seating 520 people, with, as minister, the Reverend R.K. Scons. We should like to see, remarks a writer of the time, greater liberality evinced by our fellow colonists in bringing to completion the first cathedral church in Australia. Protestants would do well in this respect to learn a lesson from the Roman Catholic community and emulates their zeal and liberality
Starting point is 04:08:56 in perpetuating their worship and extending their principles. St. James's was still the fashionable church attended by the governor and his family and all the high officials of the colony, also perforce by the convicts from the neighbouring barracks. Says Old Brame, quaintly, he was now headmaster of Sydney College in succession to Cape. It has sometimes struck us that if anything can touch the hearts of these unhappy men, and who should say nothing can, it must be when in this land of their expatriation, weakly as the Sabbath returns, they hear all clear,
Starting point is 04:09:34 classes of the community in the great congregation, joining in the beautiful prayers of our inimitable liturgy, that it may please thee to show thy pity upon all prisoners and captives. Judging from the instances already given of the way these gentry behaved when they got a little freedom, it would have taken more than the liturgy to convert that gloomy audience in the old St. James's Gallery. The attendance at St. James's in 1844,
Starting point is 04:10:04 are given us morning service one thousand four hundred afternoon five hundred and evening one thousand apparently our folk then spent the day very much as the majority of them do now says a writer we cannot forbear expressing our strong disapprobation of the practice but too prevalent in sydney of devoting the latter part of the lord's day to amusement and pleasure dinner parties water or water or land excursions and a thousand means are devised to kill the time of this sacred day, at least so soon as the morning service is closed. To attend divine service three times and spend the intervals in silent communion with holy things was a fashion of passing Sunday no more in favour than it is now. Spiked, however, of its irreligiousness, the city throve apace both by land and sea. everywhere around the foreshores centipedal wharves thrust themselves into the water,
Starting point is 04:11:13 whilst ever more and more ships came from overseas and rested alongside them to discharge the wares of the old land in return for the produce of the new. Such men as merchant Campbell and Bobby Town were the fathers of the shipping interest, and it was through them and the like of them that the city was gradually being fringed with the tall spars that spelled commerce. And we had gone on building ships too all the time. In 1834 we built nine, amounting in all to 376 tonnes.
Starting point is 04:11:48 But in 1843 we put no less than 47 into the water, aggregating 1,433 tonnes, small coasters of course, but fine, handy, useful craft. A vessels, exclusive of these registered in the port, there were less than 92, making up 7,022 tons altogether, only a little over the individual tonnage of some of the mailboats of today, certainly. But then we were still very young, and it takes time to develop a mercantile marine, and actually we did more towards it during that first half century than we have comparatively done ever since, nearing the latter end of Gipp's governorship, an occurrence took place at the barracks,
Starting point is 04:12:39 which at one period promised serious developments. At this time, the 99th regiments were there under Lieutenant Colonel Despard. Stand off the grass, Desparred, so called, because he had forbidden the public to walk on the turf in the barracks square and had put up a notice to that effect. In those days, soldiers had a regular allowance of grower, grog, and presently Despart stopped it. Then the troops became mutinous, and refused point-blank to obey orders.
Starting point is 04:13:13 Sir Maurice O'Connell, at that time commander of the forces, went to the barracks, accompanied by his staff, to try and dissuade the men from their foolish action, the consequences of which he took good care to point out to them. But he spoke in vain. Then, becoming angry, he said he would arm the cockatoo Island, convicts and lead them against the mutineers. This still more aggravated the 99th, and the men seized their arms and threatened Sir Morris and his officers with personal violence.
Starting point is 04:13:47 At this time, HMS Havana was lying in the harbour, but her commander does not seem to have offered to help the authorities in any way whatever. Perhaps he thought colonial quarrels were none of his business. So there seemed nothing for it but to send for troops to Hobart Town, where was quartered the 11th Regiment under Lieutenant Colonel Bloomfield. On receipt of the news, that officer at once chartered the Bark, Tasmania, and the 11th, 400 rank and of them set sail for Sydney. In three days they were off Kudji Bay. The strong Westerlies came up, and it was another week before they entered the heads. During her beating about outside,
Starting point is 04:14:33 the Havana passed without taking the slightest notice of them. In the meantime the 99th hearing of the expected arrivals had thought better of things, made their submission and returned to duty. The 11th arrived on January 8, 1846, and were, as soon as possible, put in lighters and landed at the commissariat wharf. There they formed up and marched four deep with fixed baynets towards the barracks. Their band playing, Paddy, will you now?
Starting point is 04:15:07 When they arrived, they found the gates closed. But on Colonel Bloomfield's command, they were at once opened, and the main guard of the 99th turned out and presented arms to the 11th, as they marched in and formed up, whilst nearly all the men, women and children of the late mutinous regiment joined in three hearty cheers for the newcomers. And thus happily ended an evening,
Starting point is 04:15:32 episode that, but for the prompt action of the authorities, might have had a very different termination. The 11th stayed in Sydney for a year, and Colonel Bloomfield, so far as his regiment's portion of the Barrett Green was concerned, gave orders that no citizens were to be prevented from walking on it. It should be explained that, especially when the band was playing in the rotunda, it was a favourite resort of the city folk. There is still a rotunda in the square, but no band ever plays there, and deadbeat sprawl over the grass at their unsweet will and pleasure. In the following January, the 11th returned to Van Diemen's Land, and were quartered at Launceston. But such a favourite had the regiment become in Sydney
Starting point is 04:16:21 that the townspeople petitioned the general to allow them to return and take the place of the 99th, a noted lot of hard cases, and actually offered to bear the cost of the regiment's transit both ways. This was exceeded to, and, in August 1848, the 11th returned, and were the first troops to occupy the new Victoria barracks. As for the 99th, they were ordered from Van Diemen's Land to India, both colonies apparently being very glad indeed to get rid of them. It may be mentioned, as showing the hold that fine soldier Colonel Bloomfield had over his men, that all the during the stay of the 11th in New South Wales,
Starting point is 04:17:07 the gold discoveries took place, with all their ensuing excitement and feverish unrest, scarcely a soldier deserted from his regiment. Says a new arrival, writing in 1846, and staying at Petty's Hotel, a respectable quiet establishment. Passing through Barrack Square to mine in, shortly before nine o'clock,
Starting point is 04:17:30 I found tattoo going on, and drums and fiefs of the 99thes of the 99th regiment rattling away at Mrs. Whalets, the pretty old song of I'd be a butterfly in the most spirited style, just as if we were not 16,000 miles away from the horse guards. With two regiments established in the heart of the city, the military element in those days was evidently an important factor in the social life of the place, and doubtless conflicts between the soldiers and the pushes, then known as the cabbage tree mob, were so common as to be hardly worth chronicling.
Starting point is 04:18:09 Cabbage trees are described as an unruly set of young fellows, native-born generally, who hung about the doors of the Sydney theatres, and, not being able to perhaps must a coin enough to enter the house, amuse themselves by molesting those who can afford that luxury, dressed in a suit of Fustian or colonial tweed, and the emblem of their order, the low-crowned cabbage palm hat. The main object of their enmity seems to be the ordinary black headpiece worn by respectable persons.
Starting point is 04:18:44 Well, we have improved somewhat on that sort of business, so far at least as the theatres are concerned. But although one of the favourite haunts of the up-to-date evolution of the cabbage tree mob, the Straw Hats Brigade, is a church porch whence they could insult the worshippers at their exits and entrances. The change of venue has not improved their behaviour in any very great measure. End of Chapter 11 Chapter 12 of Sydney Past and Present by John Arthur Barry.
Starting point is 04:19:23 This Libre of Oxy recording is in the public domain. Sporting in the Forties From time to time, during the course of this chronicle, a glance has been taken at the sports of the people. and the progress of horse racing, yachting, etc., among them noted. Early cricket was also touched upon, as seen then, in a rather crude and incomplete condition. But during the forties, more interest was taken in cricket than at any prior period.
Starting point is 04:19:54 It may indeed from that time be said to become the Australian game Part Excellence. Some years ago, Mr. Harry Hilliard says, there were perhaps in this year, 1843, 100 cricketers in Sydney. Messrs W and R still were both fine bats, as was also a gentleman named Palmer, connected with banking. I myself was also accounted an excellent bat. Rowley, a cabinetmaker, was the crack bowler, underhand, of course. His bowling had a natural break of five or six inches from leg.
Starting point is 04:20:30 Oh, I can tell you that Rowley would have puzzled a lot of our morgue, modern bats, for a while anyhow. Of course, in these days, there was no football. Horse racing seemed to have gone much out of favour, and yachting was not very popular. Therefore, cricket throve a main, and clubs sprung up everywhere. There was the currency, composed entirely of colonials,
Starting point is 04:20:53 and to which Mr. Hilliard belonged, the Union, Victorian, Albert and Australian. The matches of importance were played in Hyde Park, The city teams too, then, as now, went inland to Parramatta, Liverpool and Windsor, and about one of these country matches, Hilliard used to tell a curious little story. The Australian club, it appears, went to Windsor to play the locals, for whom Hilliard stood umpire, whilst Mr Sadler performed the same office for the visitors. Among the Windsor players were two brothers named Buschell, and Sadler gave one of them out,
Starting point is 04:21:30 leg before. The batsman, however, stoutly contested this decision, backed up by his brother, who exclaimed, Don't he go out, Bill, and if Tompire tries to put you out, knock him down with your bat! And finally, to avoid a free fight, another innings had to be given to bushel. Evidently, country cricket was a thing to be taken very seriously in the forties. We used, says Hilliard, to have great trouble to keep the wickets anything like like decent. You see, there was no supervision of the ground, and even the clubs would fight among themselves for the possession of a choice pitch. Sometimes we would send boys up to hold
Starting point is 04:22:11 a pitch for us from daybreak on the morning of the match. The device we had to keep the people off the grass was to tar the underside of the top rail of the fences. The tar hung down in drips, and as intruders came through, it would smear their clothes. None of the governors except Sir William Denison according to Mr. Hilliard took any interest in cricket although some of the young aides and others of the staff used occasionally to have a game. Sir James Martin as a youngster played a great deal but never attained much proficiency. In Mr. Hilliard's opinion the real father of New South Wales cricket was Mr Tonks. It was he and I who put the first spade into the present domain ground. He kept a public house in those days but always
Starting point is 04:23:00 encouraged the cricketers to drink tea. Whenever we had a match, we had tea with good old Mrs. Tunks. Also, Mr. Driver, a solicitor and an MP, and the son of the proprietor of an hotel called the Three Tons, which stood at the corner of King and Elizabeth Street, just where Temple Court now stands, was another great patron of the game. But he was never much of a player,
Starting point is 04:23:24 though he was always ready to help us with his money. Hilliard was one of six currency lads who played in the first inter-colonial match with Victoria and he says most of the team fielded barefoot. This was in 1856 and was won by New South Wales by three wickets. Then in 1857 the Melbourne men came to Sydney and met in the outer domain being again beaten. The excitement was intense,
Starting point is 04:23:54 the governor and all sorts and conditions of people being present. to the number of 10,000. The match lasted two days and a half. Scores, New South Wales, 80 and 86. Victoria 63 and 38. Slow bats and cautious in those days with the top score, Gilbert, of 31. His batting, said the newspapers,
Starting point is 04:24:19 was the theme of universal admiration. Well, truly times have changed since that stonewalling era and the papers of today would doubtless comment on such a performance somewhat differently, unless the 31 were made in as many minutes. The group portrait of New South Wales Rifle Champions marks an interesting stage in the Australian Volunteer Movement, and particularly in that branch of it which has for its object the making of marksmen.
Starting point is 04:24:50 The picture illustrates an account of the first inter-colonial rifle match held in Australia, and appropriately enough, the contestants with the contestants, New South Wales and Victoria, whose representatives since then have met in many friendly shootings with varying fortune. The mother colony proved victorious at the first trial of skill at the targets, and there is no doubt that the wider field of fame opened up to riflemen by this intercolonial meeting did much towards establishing the present satisfactory state of affairs. From beating the men of his own colony, the champion began to covet honours further a field, and ultimately the pinnacle was reached when he was sent home to meet the best shots in
Starting point is 04:25:34 Great Britain. The idea of the first match originated with the members of the Victorian Rifle Association, and although all the colonies were invited to take part, none of them could see their way clear to accept the invitation. The conditions governing the match were that each colony should contribute 50 pounds per annum for three years, for the purpose of purchasing a challenge shield which had to be won three times in succession before passing into the possession of any colony. In consideration of the first meeting being held in Melbourne, the Victorian Association donated a further sum of £50 to the successful competitors in the first year.
Starting point is 04:26:14 Bonafide volunteers alone were eligible, and the use of any rifle with a trigger pull of £3 was allowed. Each competitor had ten shots at each of the respective distances of 200, 300,000. 500, 600, 600, 800 and 900 yards, making 70 shots in all, Hythe position and Wimbledon system of scoring. Ten of the best shots in New South Wales was selected by the association and a like number was chosen by the Victorian Association from their shooting in four special practices.
Starting point is 04:26:50 The two teams met at Melbourne But on November 3, 1862, when, after a keenly contested match, especially up to 700 yards, the men from the parent colony won with 64 points to spare. Their superiority over the Victorians was principally apparent at the long ranges. In these days of shooting with uniform weapons, it is almost impossible to compare with any degree of fairness present scores with those of the match of 1862. Still, the scores made in that contest were undoubted,
Starting point is 04:27:24 good, for shooting had not been reduced to the fine art it is now. The scores on the New South Wales side were Corporal Lynch, 182, Trooper Sharp 177, Private Rainer, 168, Sergeant Webb, 152, Private Wyndham, 150, Lieutenant Campbell, 144, Sergeant Strong 140, Sergeant Major Helier, 134, Private Dixon, 125, Captain Windayer, 125. Total, 1,497.
Starting point is 04:28:05 On the Victorian side, the total was 1,432 points, made up as under, Private McNaughton, 175, Sergeant Wright, 154, Sergeant Douglas 154, Sergeant Sleep, 152, Private Coal 151 Captain Radcliffe 141 Sergeant Templeton 140 Private Peterson 132 Private McEwen 124 Private Frost 109
Starting point is 04:28:40 A banquet in the evening wound up the event And on the following day The Sydney men embarked for home on the city of Sydney On the way up the coast She was wrecked near Green Cape November 5, 1862. Fortunately, all lives were saved, but uniforms, private effects,
Starting point is 04:29:01 and valuable small-bore rifles were lost. Amistair Davis of Burke Street, Melbourne, photographed the victorious 10, of whom six belonged to the Sydney Battalion volunteer rifles, one to the suburban battalion, and one to the Country Corps, West Maitland. The mounted rifles furnished the other two,
Starting point is 04:29:22 Sergeant Major Helia and Trooper Sharp, Captain Harbottle, SBVR, accompanied the team as captain, and Sergeant Major Lees of the staff acted as marker. If ever there was a nondescript sort of a city in these forties, it was Sydney, and yet, as every visitor allowed, it bore a preeminently English aspect. Wrights one in particular, Sydney is, I think, more exclusively English in its population than either Liverpool or London. Where it's not were an occasional orange tree in full bloom or fruit in the backyard of some of the older cottages, or a flock of little green parrots whistling as they
Starting point is 04:30:04 alight for a moment on a housetop, one might fancy himself at Brighton or Plymouth. This would require a rather fervid imagination one fancies, and our author gets nearer the mark when he says it might be Waterford or Wapping with a dash of Nova Scotian Halifax. Indeed, he and many others like him seem to have been very considerably puzzled to find comparisons, but old pictures will thoroughly bear out his remark that the construction of the buildings is blamably ill-suited to a semi-tropical climate,
Starting point is 04:30:38 bare-faced, smug-looking tenements, without verandas or even broad eaves. Nor indeed is it necessary to consult contemporary views to see the justice of this criticism inasm as much as, at the present day, you can see in places the same smugged, bare-faced old houses, still standing, forlorn, disreputable, blistered by the sun and rain of many years. Goats were still a conspicuous feature of our streets.
Starting point is 04:31:09 Nearly every cottage has its goat or family of goats. They ramble about the highways and byways, picking up a haphazard livelihood during the day and going home willingly or compulsorily to be milked, at night. We'll be tied the suburban garden whose gate is left for a moment and closed. In an instant, the bearded tribes rush in,
Starting point is 04:31:31 and, in a few seconds, roses, sweet peas, carnations, stocks, etc., are as closely nibbled down as though a flock of locusts had bivouacked for a week on the spot, and the neat flower beds are dotted over with little clover feet, as if ten thousand infantine devils
Starting point is 04:31:49 had been dancing there, a juvenile sabat. The man who wrote that wrote feelingly, and one can see that more than once his garden gate had been left open, even as they still are, and with the same results.
Starting point is 04:32:03 Like the poor and the unemployed, the goats we seem fated to have always with us. Pitt Street, even half a century ago or more, appears to have been noted for its linen draper's shops. Whether we regard the excellence of their arrangements, the sterling value of the commodities, the costliness of their large and showy windows, and at night the glistening splendour of their lamps,
Starting point is 04:32:30 sometimes most tastefully ornamented, we cannot but feel proud of our city, and even the stranger must acknowledge that those houses of business would not disgrace any of our older towns in the mother country. Evidently, the predecessors of our hoarders, ways, farmers, etc., kept us well up to date as do their descendants.
Starting point is 04:32:54 A picture of O'Connell Street, towards the end of the forties, is worth reproducing. Referring to the similarity of the name with that of the celebrated Irish agitator, the old writer says, Start not, gentle reader at the name. The place bearing this designation
Starting point is 04:33:11 is calm and peaceful as you can desire. We have no agitation here, save the calm agitation of shrubs and flowers, which adorn the little gardens. smiling on either side, fanned as they are by soft zeffers, gaily playing around. Whatever opinion may be entertained of the name, but one can be held regarding the street. It is one of the most tasty in Sydney. The houses, as we have already hinted, have gardens before them, some of which are kept with much neatness by their careful owners.
Starting point is 04:33:46 Here may be seen our native and English plants, vying which shall outshine the other, which shall more adorn the garden plot, which more adorn the air. Of course, as the writer remarks later on, the streets was named in honour of our worthy commander of the forces, Sir Maurice O'Connell, but alas, the only zeffers there today are formed of sand and dust, and the perfume is mostly chemical in its nature,
Starting point is 04:34:13 whilst the tastiness of those bygone days has fled forever. And they thought a lot of their streets in those times. the running of pit streets right through to the key was then under discussion it will thus be rendered the main street of the town and when completed the line of road for traffic nearly two miles in length will besides its vast accommodation be no small ornament to our fair city we may remark of the streets of sydney generally that they are very regular and well formed pitt and castle-ray streets are almost in straight lines though each extends about a mile island a half. By all visitors, the palm was almost unanimously awarded to the congregational church in Pitt Street as the handsomest building in the city. It was designed by Mr. John Bibb and erected under his supervision, the foundation stone having been laid by Dr. Ross on anniversary day 1841. Then, by reason of the embarrassed state of affairs in the colony, it was soon afterwards
Starting point is 04:35:20 thought prudent to discontinue building. In 1844, a fresh start was made, and in January 1846, the church was first opened for public worship. The first ornamental iron columns cast in Sydney were made for this edifice by Mr Dawson. They were 14 in number of the Ionic Order, fluted and finished an imitation bronze. The organ was also of colonial manufacture, and was built specially for the church by Mr. W. J. J. J. Johnson, also of this city. In the same year, under the direction of the same architect, the Union Bank of Australia, at the corner of Pitt and Hunter Streets, was added to and enlarged, until it was regarded as one
Starting point is 04:36:08 of the greatest ornaments of Sydney. In King Street, in a shop on the left-hand side, going towards Queen's Square, which perhaps some old residents can still identify, lived and flourished the notorious Quaker John Towell transported for forgery. This remarkable man reached Sydney in 1814 and his knowledge of drugs procured his retention as assistant in the convict hospital instead of being assigned as a servant upcountry. In this situation he continued some three years
Starting point is 04:36:42 when he received his ticket of leave and shortly afterwards one of emancipation. Then in 1832 he set up as a case chemist, the first regular business of the kind in the colony, and at once began to thrive. He also embarked in the shipping trade, engaged in oil speculation, bought up all the whalebone that came to the port, and was the first person in the colony to convert it into an article of profitable export. Piety and good work seem in those days to have been the keynote of his life. He became a shining light among the society of friends and built them a
Starting point is 04:37:21 meeting house in Macquarie Street. Judge Therry knew him well and says that his whole aspect and demeanour proclaimed him a very saintly personage indeed. He it was who, having ordered a large consignment of spirits from England, and having in the meantime changed his views respecting the liquor traffic, caused the whole lot to be emptied into the harbour, and backhouse the travelling Quaker must have witnessed the occurrence, for he says, although not mentioning towel by name, We had the satisfaction of seeing the destruction of five pensions of rum, containing 492 gallons, and two hogsheads of Geneva, containing 116 gallons. They were the property of one of our friends, whose agent in England had not been apprised
Starting point is 04:38:12 of a change in the views of his correspondent, with respect to the use and sale of spirit, in which he cannot now be conscientiously concerned. He therefore represented the case to the governor who allowed them to be taken out of bond, free of duty, and under charge of an officer of customs, placed on board a staged boat, which took them out into the cove, where the heads of the casks were removed,
Starting point is 04:38:38 and the contents poured into the sea. We were very much pleased with the hearty manner in which the custom-house officers superintended the sacrifice of property to principle, something like an advertisement for Towel to this curious business. After absence of 16 years, Towel returned to England, a rich man, or at least fairly so, although the troubles of 1843 affected him considerably. There he married a second wife. The first had followed him to Sydney and died in the colony. Then, becoming involved in a liaison with a woman named Sarah Hart,
Starting point is 04:39:16 he eventually killed her by poisoning, and was tried and executed, thus ending a life of most consummate hypocrisy, intermingled with adventurous and romantic incidents that would fill a volume to relate in detail. It was on the occasion of this murder that the electric telegraph began its long existence as a factor in the detection of crime,
Starting point is 04:39:39 and Towel was its first capture. From the Slough Railway Station, there flashed along the line to Paddington the message, an elderly man between 50 and 60, short in the garb of a Quaker, with broad-brimmed hats and white cravat, left here, 742 train, watch his movements. So much for John Towell, Forger and murderer,
Starting point is 04:40:05 but above all, arch-hypocrite of his time. Mention must be made of the 54th anniversary, on which day there was a big demonstration on the, the harbour, no less than seven steamers puffing about, laden with people to view the regatta, whilst the band of the 28th regiment aboard the flagship, the Royal Sovereign, played various patriotic airs. Lieutenant Colonel Barney of the Royal Engineers gave a sort of garden party on the Fort Macquarie Green, at which were present Sir George and Lady Gipps, and most of the official notabilities.
Starting point is 04:40:42 The dinner took place at the Royal Hotel at seven o'clock that evening, and Captain O'Connell, the native-born son of Sir Morris, and, in due time, Sir Morris in his turn, took the chair, with Robert Nichols as vice. There were 170 guests present, and James Martin, then a youngster of 22, and articled Clark to Nichols, was called upon to reply to the toast of civil and religious liberty, a sentiment which gives a very broad hint of what some folks were striving after, even as late as that. In 46 there took place the last of these meetings, which had then lost all political significance, but on the very same evening there was a public dinner, at which there was some
Starting point is 04:41:30 very strong speaking indeed. Robert Lowe, for instance, made a speech on the reform of the colonial policy in which he hit hard at the government, and concluded by telling his audience that, if you would be free, yourselves must strike the blow, not at the men, but at the system that enslaves you. James Martin was present as the champion of the press, with which he was then connected, writing weekly articles for the Atlas, and making things hum with the bold versatility of youth.
Starting point is 04:42:05 Whatever visitors may have thought of our city, they invariably went into ecstas over our botanic gardens, which, under the fostering care of the noted botanist Alan Cunningham, had long been noted far and wide as the Eden of the East. Poor Cunningham was lost in 1835, whilst with Major Mitchell, upon one of the latter's exploring trips in the neighbourhood of the Bogan River, and he was never more heard of. But in one of the ponds of the lower portion of the gardens he loved so well and did so much for,
Starting point is 04:42:38 there is a stone obelisk, erected to his memory, and surrounded by clumps of aquatic plants. Both explorer and botanists deserve well of their fellow colonists, inasmuch as one gave us the water bag and the other are gardens. Certainly, Mitchell's first bag was a primitive affair, being merely sacking smeared over with mutton fat, but it was the forerunner of its canvas evolution, which has not only proved a source of immeasurable comfort to bushmen throughout Australasia,
Starting point is 04:43:09 but, into the bargain, saved many hundreds of lives. No statue of Mitchell should be complete without the presentment of one. In those days the gardens were divided into two sections, known as the upper and the lower, the first of which was laid out in trim walks, partairs and flower beds, whilst the other was left more in its natural condition, diversified by lawns, rockeries, ponds and clumps of shrubs. Both gardens were enclosed by walls and high paling fences, and between these ran a carriage drive,
Starting point is 04:43:47 giving access to the domain from Fort Macquarie. Of late years, the drive has been closed, and the whole space practically thrown into one. Under the able management of Mr. Charles Moore, who for many years was the curator, extensive additions and alterations were made, much ground reclaimed from the sea, and now the gardens cover a space of some 150 acres.
Starting point is 04:44:12 A familiar feature of the ground, is the noble Norfolk Island pine, towering to a height of 107 feet, with a trunk measuring 30 feet at the base. Nearly 30 years ago, there appeared a picture of this fine tree in the illustrated Sydney News. With the accompanying letter press was a statement that it was not known when the Great Pine was planted. This brought the following interesting letter, which speaks for itself.
Starting point is 04:44:41 Redburnburg, Singleton, March the 23rd, 1872. Sir, my attention having been drawn to an article in your paper relative to the large Norfolk Island pine in the botanic gardens, in which you state that it is not known when the said tree was planted, I beg to inform you that I planted it in the year 1818, at which time I was employed in the gardens. It had previously been planted in the lower ground, garden near the water course and had been washed out during some heavy rains that occurred about
Starting point is 04:45:16 that time. It was lying half buried in sand for almost six months, when it was removed and planted by me in its present situation in the year above stated. Mrs. Macquarie was present on the occasion and handed me the tree to place in the ground. It was then about two feet six inches in height. Your obedient servant, John Richardson. Some time in 1847, improvements were started at the General Post Office, and a handsome portico was erected. Six Doric columns support an elaborate entablature and pediments with the royal arms, executed by Mr. Abraham, an able sculptor resident in the colony, in the centre of the tympanum. The whole effect is chaste and severe, and much more befitting the aspect of a place of business
Starting point is 04:46:10 than a mere ornamental and gaudy design would be. When the barracks are removed, the portico will afford a noble termination to the street, which will be opened, forming a vista in front of the building. What one wonders, would old foals have thought of our present post-office palace could he have lived to see it? And, by the way, it may be mentioned that at least three of those Doric columns are still in existence.
Starting point is 04:46:39 One is erected at Bradley's head to serve the, the purpose of a beacon at that end of the measured mile between it and Fort Denison. The other two are, or were, until, quite lately, serving as gateposts at the corner of Oxford and Queen Street's Sikh Transit. An old landmark that has recently disappeared is the building once known as Hancock's Tower, for over half a century, a familiar object in the eyes of Sydney folk. Hancock, it seems, was a wheelwright, whose shop stood near the site of the present Robert's Hotel on the corner of George and Market Streets. Here he flourished, made much money, and eventually retiring from business,
Starting point is 04:47:23 built himself the residence of which the Curious Tower formed a portion. Constructed of large squared stones with battlemented walls, from whose lofty embrasures protruded dummy guns or Quakers, it looked more like some medieval fortress than ought else, whilst to heighten the effect at each corner was the carved effigy of a knight in armour, and the low Norman roof was surmounted by a large weathercock. All sorts of fairy stories clustered around this building, the favourite one being that Hancock had erected it
Starting point is 04:47:58 for the purpose of therein emuring his wife, bluebeard fashion, in some dim and gloomy chamber, and children used to look up, half scared, half expectant at the high windows, to catch a glimpse of the unfortunate lady peering from her prison. Between the tower and the old inner joining it, also once a prominent feature of the neighbourhood, Hancock had laid out a courtyard with flower beds and trellises, and here too he placed a statue, life-sized and carved out of stone.
Starting point is 04:48:32 This, Hancock left orders so it is said in his will, was to be erected over his grave. His wish was carried into a stone. and the statue may still be seen by the curious at Rockwood. End of Chapter 12. Chapter 13 of Sydney Past and Present by John Arthur Barry. This Librivox recording is in the public domain. Some early suburbs and islands.
Starting point is 04:49:09 No history of Sydney would be complete without some reference to its early suburbs and the appearance they presented in those days. Gradually the shores of the sequestered bays and inlets were being built upon, and Potts Point, Willamalu, Rushcutter and Elizabeth Bays, the North Shore, Balmain, Piedmont and others were becoming favourite residential resorts of the wealthier citizens, who built what were then considered fine mansions,
Starting point is 04:49:37 as indeed most of them were, laid out grounds, and made themselves generally very comfortable. On Potts Point, at the end of the forties, there may have been half a dozen or so of houses all told, equally with the old fig tree. It was then a favourite resort of swimmers who used to go out in parties and race from one point to the other,
Starting point is 04:49:59 often paying for their temerity with their lives, by reason either of cramp or sharks. Monday mentions that, in December 1849, a man swimming near the fig tree was seized by a very large shark. So close in shore was this that some of the bathers' presents beat off the brute with their boat hooks,
Starting point is 04:50:20 but the poor fellow died from loss of blood in a few minutes. For a great number of years, Robinson Baths, a large hulk, moored and used as a public bathing place, lay in Wollamalu Bay, and was then the only place of the kind in the colony. Higher up towards the head of the bay, somewhere about the site of the present art gallery, was a peculiar pile of rocks known as the steps, because somebody had once gone to the trouble of cutting a number of stairs in the cliff.
Starting point is 04:50:52 But the steps and the surrounding ridges have long ago been quarried and filled up, and now form part of the reclamation, upon which is Cowper's Wharf. High watermark then extended to beyond Plunket Street of the present, some thirteen or fourteen hundred feet inland from the edge of the present wharf. There was also an arm of the harbour that ran up in the southwest corner of the bay, nearly to Woolamaloo Street. And although from the shallowness of the bay there was a great expanse of sand and mudflats at low tide,
Starting point is 04:51:24 yet at high tide it was possible to fish from some of the verandas or windows of a few houses along the shoreline. Much diversity of opinion obtains respecting the name of this old suburb. Colonel Monday, writing 40 years ago, says that it is merely a corruption of Wallamala, the Aboriginal term for the place of tombs,
Starting point is 04:51:46 and that it was an old. burial place of the blacks. Other authorities give the correct spelling as Walla Mulla and say that it is derived from the fashion after which the natives tried to pronounce the word Mwindermill. Mundy's theory, or rather that of whoever gave him the information, seems the most feasible. However this may be, Wulamalu was originally a grant to Mr. Commissary Palmer who formed upon it a sort of model farm. The boundaries of the estate reached from the water to the old South Head Road, now Oxford Street, and were defined by ditches and high stone walls. Mr. Palmer himself lived in a house near the junction of Palmer
Starting point is 04:52:28 and William Street, which was later on occupied by Archbishop Polding. Afterwards, about a hundred acres of the grants were acquired by a Mr. Riley, and for long afterwards was known as the Riley Estate. Rush Cutter's Bay, so called from the fact that there, in 1788, two men, convicts employed in cutting rushes, were set upon by natives and speared to death, was in a special favour for residing in at this time. It must not be forgotten that the bay, or rather its foreshores, was the spot where was established what might be called the first Australian market garden. To the south at the head of the bay, there spread a big flat, enriched by alluvial, washed down from the adjoining highlands
Starting point is 04:53:18 and added to by silt from the shores. When the new South Head Road was made, this valley above it was drained and formed into a big series of vegetable beds which supplied the city for many years. Through the centre of the valley ran a creek spanned by a strong bridge with a single arch just where it was crossed by the Lower South Head Road.
Starting point is 04:53:41 At a short distance from this Rushcote's Bay Bridge on the left-hand side stood a house of call, known as the White Conduit House. Early settlers in the colonies were prone to call places in the new land after other and well-known ones at home, and in this instance the White Conduit perpetrated its English namesake far away in Pentonville, noted for its arbours, fishbonds and shady walks. Also, as a resort on Sundays of citizens, their apprentices and wives, where they could get hot loaves and butter, tea and fresh milk.
Starting point is 04:54:17 And in some sort, such were the inducements held out to visitors from the city by its antipodean prototype at Rushcutter's Bay. To reach it, want took a pleasant stroll across the paddock adjoining Hyde Park, through Willamaloo Valley, and up to the eastern heights via the present William Street, then a pretty country lane, fringed at intervals with gardens, then pass the great stone windmills on Darlinghurst, through some scrubby gullies, and to the white conduit,
Starting point is 04:54:46 for a long-sleever of Cooper's triple X, or perhaps something stronger hailing from Underwoods Distillery, not very far distant. The old house, although a good deal altered, still stands, and is easily recognised by old residents. As for Darling Point, to which, just past the conduit, the road turned off, It was considered in those days rather too remote for a suburban residence,
Starting point is 04:55:14 but, later on, T.S. Mort took hold on the point, and showed in beautiful green oaks what could be done by judiciously assisting nature with art. Those who remember green oaks in its parmius days will endorse the success of his undertaking and his taste in landscape gardening of a high order. In 1849 was laid the foundation of the foundation of the first of the, the pretty church of St. Marks. The work went on until 1851 when the gold fever broke out in Australia. Labor prices rose sky high and the building was before stopped. It was however resumed in 1852 with the result of producing one of the prettiest churches in the colony. For a very
Starting point is 04:56:00 long time Potts Point remained one of the most secluded of all Sydney's suburbs. It's rocky foreshores and rude steep cliffs, clothed with thickets of Lantana and bunches of prickly pear and pig face, formed indeed an ideal spot for picnics, and it was easily got at by a short cut across the sands of Willamaloo Bay. But for many years, there were only a few scattered dwellings. Turning our attention to the North Shore,
Starting point is 04:56:31 we find that so long ago is 1824 or 1825, Sir Thomas Brisbane made a grant to Mr. James Milsson, senior, have 50 acres of land, situated between Kareenink Cove and Labander Bay. He might have had more, but as cultivation was the purpose he had in view, and the ground was decidedly unsuitable, he went further afield, and in the neighbourhood of Hornsby selected a large tract of the fertile soil there. Mr. Milsson was one of the first residents on North Shore. Another grant was made by Macquarie to William Blue of some 90s. acres, now known as Blue's Point, extending in an easterly direction towards
Starting point is 04:57:14 Milsons Point. Mr, better known as Billy Blue, was a native of the West Indies, and one of his daughters married Mr. Lavender, to whom was given by his father-in-law, that's part of the original Grant, now known as Lavender Bay. Prior to this it was known as Hulk Bay, and Mr. George Lavender was in charge of the Hulk's, on board of which the convicts were kept waiting, transference to the Swan River settlement in Western Australia. A writer, to whose research is made with great care and trouble, much of the information respecting North Shore here set forth is due, says he was informed by Mr. J. S. Abraham that the native name of Lavender Bay was Quilby. During the first 50 years of the colony's existence, the thickly growing timber of the North Shore
Starting point is 04:58:04 forests was much made use of for building and other purposes. it seems to have been mostly big gum and was felled and dressed by gangs of convicts but there were fig trees too of great size one specimen was until recently still standing at milson's point the roots and the earth about them were surrounded by a solid casing of cement notwithstanding this however some months ago a heavy gale smote the old warrior and cast him to the ground so far as can be determined the first house on Milsson's point belonged to a Mr. H.T. Green, who lived not very far from where the tree stood. About 1850, his father, Mr. George Green, leased the house and an acre of ground that went with it from Mr. Robert Campbell, and for long afterwards, the thoroughfare leading to the horse ferry was known as Greens Lane. A coloured plan, framed and glazed, attached to the tree, and which showed the ferry company's land and its boundaries,
Starting point is 04:59:09 often excited the curiosity of passers-by who were not near enough to read it. The original landing place, as shown in a contemporary picture, was a low stone wall, and this remained so until the erection of a wharf, upon which, however, was no shelter of any kind. The point appears to have been a favourite camping place of the blacks, notably the Cameret tribe, then the most powerful on the northern side, side of the harbour. The first hotel opened on the point was that known as the fig tree at Blues Point Road, kept by Mr Thomas Redgrave. This was in 1841. In 1843, Mr Burns opened the Union Inn near Crow's Nest on Lane Cove Road, and in 1845 Mr. Wittsford started business
Starting point is 04:59:59 in the Lily of St. Leonard's, still to be seen, modernised, on nearly the same site in Alfred Street. In explanation of the rather curious name of this last hostelry, the late Honourable George Thornton told the writer, already referred to, that in the time of Mr. Dind, one of the landlords, the sign was the figure of an Aboriginal woman, and that's probably the title of the house, was merely intended as an early-day witticism.
Starting point is 05:00:29 The Milsson family is, of course, intimately associated with the history of the point bearing its name. Mr. Milsson, Sr., was one of the first, one of the earliest settlers upon it, and his son, Mr. James Milsson, was among the first to establish a steam ferry across to the city. Deputy commissioners Miller and Walker, after whom two of the principal North Sydney streets are named, were also associated with Mr. Milsson in this undertaking. The first steam ferry boat to ply from the point was named the Princess, and was built at Palmain by Mr. Boud event, to run as a punt transit of horses and vehicles.
Starting point is 05:01:09 She, however, does not seem to have been a success financially. Sometime afterwards, captains Joseph and Thomas Gerard ran a steamer built by Mr. Chown of Piermont and called the Fairy Queen. In the early 50s, a company was formed which imported a steamer in sections from England. It was put together in Sydney, named the Herald, and ran between Blues and Miller's points. The Gerrards then changed their route to Milsson's point. Messrs J. Milsson Jr., F. Lord, W. Tucker, C. Firth and others, with the founders of a steam ferry company trading between Sydney and the North Shore. They own three boats, the Alexandra and the Kiribilli for passengers, and the transit for vehicles.
Starting point is 05:02:00 After much keen competition, the fares were reduced from a shilling each way to sixpence, and ultimately to threepence. In 1878, this company sold out to the North Shore Ferry Company, and the late Captain Somerbell was appointed manager. The fare was then reduced to tuppence, and then, some years ago, to one penny each way. Thirty-odd years ago, there was a steam ferry from Circular Key to Milsons Point, running boats every quarter of an hour,
Starting point is 05:02:31 and at the same periods, from Pottinger Street, McNamara's Wharf, near Windmill Street, to Blue's Point. all at Threpenny fares each way. Total daily traffic, about 150 passengers. Settlement it will thus be seen was then scarce enough in our big suburb of North Sydney. This was due in part to the expense of clearing the heavy timber, also to the fact that holders of land prefer to keep it unimproved
Starting point is 05:03:00 in the certain hope of an ever-increasing value. Land in the early days of the shore was leased for three pounds per annum, per acre. Fifty pounds per acre per annum would be nearer the present average rate in many spots there. Manifestly, a history of the harbour would be out of place here, but a glance at the early aspect and history of two of its islands, inseparately bound up as they are with the story of our city, will be of interest. Of Garden Island, where Philip tried with but a small measure of success to grow vegetables for his infant colony, mention has already been made. As to quite how many times the island we now know as Fort Denison has changed its name, seems uncertain.
Starting point is 05:03:47 When Philip arrived it was a picturesque rock, called by the natives Maltewanyi. The governor altered that to rock, or rocky island. Then, at the first criminal court assembled on February 11, 1788, says one account, a convict found guilty of robbing another of some biscuit, was sentenced to be confined on this island. for a week, and to be fed on bread and water alone. The other convicts promptly dubbed the spot Pinchgut, a name that may be said to have stuck to it until the present day. Another early historian says, speaking of the harbour islands,
Starting point is 05:04:26 the most noted being one fronting the cove, bearing the unpoetical name of Pinchgut on account of its having been the primitive prison of the colony and the spot whereon malefactors were in olden times hung in chains. Again, one of the oldest writers referring to this island says, On the 29th of November, 1796, eight men had sentence of death passed upon them. Francis Morgan for murder was executed,
Starting point is 05:04:54 and his body hung in chains on the island of Maltiwanyi. This spectacle, shocking to the refined mind, served as an object of ridicule to the convicts and terror to the natives, who, though hitherto particularly partial to that spot, now totally abandoned it, lest the malefactors should descend and seize them in the same way as their suspicion prompted them to imagine spirits did.
Starting point is 05:05:20 Respecting this island, Lang writes, There was a remarkable rock or islet from which time immemorial had occupied a prominent position in the harbour in the approach to the city, and which formed a striking object in the field view from the surrounding heights, consisting as it did, of a vast mass of grey weather-beaten rock, rising perpendicularly in a cylinder column
Starting point is 05:05:44 to an elevation of 75 feet from the deep water. This natural ornament of the harbour, however, which no art could have equalled, this remarkable work of God, which had stood like a sentinel keeping watch upon the harbour for thousands of years, was at length destroyed by the folly of man. Some official gothorhan,
Starting point is 05:06:05 who must surely have had the organ of destructive largely developed, persuaded the local government of the day to quarry down the rock very nearly to the water's edge, with a view of being converted into a battery, forsooth for the protection of the harbour. The work of destruction accordingly commenced and proceeded apace till this fine object in the field of vision for miles and miles around in every direction was forever destroyed,
Starting point is 05:06:32 and the romantic islet at length, replaced for ten or twelve years thereafter by the unsightliness of an abandoned quarry. For, as usually happened with government works under the beautiful colonial system of the past, the idea of having a fort on Pinchgut Island was given up after a large expenditure had been incurred in the work of destruction. Perhaps when feelings of compunction on the part of its authors, if not in consequence of some unfavourable opinion, respecting the proposed erection from the Ordinance Department in London and huge piles of rough stones
Starting point is 05:07:09 heaped up in all possible forms of irregularity and confusion were, for many years thereafter, the befitting monument of this precious piece of official vandalism. Sir William Denison seems to have, in some sort, made a hobby of the place, and it was he who had the existing fortification constructed an abnormal sort of Martello Tower Combastian business. A very nightmare of a fort, even as says Peter Possum, decorated with a tower like a gigantic hat,
Starting point is 05:07:41 a monstrously magnified drab-mount castle, which doth not add greatly to the harbour's picturesqueness. And the crown of Bathos was set on the whole affair by the discovery, presently that owing probably to the poorest nature of the sandstone upon which it was built, it was not possible to fire a gun as a time signal without shaking the island to its foundations. The most it can do indeed seems to be to display a red beacon lightenights. Respecting Cockatoo Island, a writer in the 40s says, this natural Hulk is situated about two miles above Sydney, just where Port Jackson narrows into a creek called the Parramatta
Starting point is 05:08:26 river and about a quarter of a mile from either shore. Here is all that remains of that stupendous machinery, which, from first to last, has introduced into and diffused through these colonies, not less than 60,000 of Great Britain's offenders, and by whose agency it may be said, this great fifth portion of the globe has been redeemed from the savage and appropriated to the European family. The Isle is a triangle in form
Starting point is 05:08:56 about 400 yards long by 280 in width. It contains at present about 300 prisoners under conviction for offences committed in the colony or expires from Norfolk Island. Many of these are regular incurable's, doubly and trebly convicted. The prisoners are employed in quarrying stone in laying down a clear and spacious wharf around this rugged aisle
Starting point is 05:09:20 so that a few centuries can command the entire circumference. They are, moreover, engaged in the useful work of excavating a dry dock, a convenience that does not its presence exist in these colonies. The establishment is admirably adapted, both by nature and art, to its purpose. Nevertheless, many desperate attempts to escape were made in my time. One wretched man flunk himself into the water, loaded with chains, and, being a powerful swimmer, had got nearly a hundred yards from the pier, before the sentry perceived him. Disregarding the soldiers shouts and threats,
Starting point is 05:09:59 the man swams steadily onwards, upon which the sentry fired and the wretch instantly sank. Nor was his body ever found. Sharks in search of offal from the slaughterhouses haunts this part of the harbour and act as an efficient cordon. The great curiosity of Cockatoo Island is the silos, excavations in the solid rock shaped like a huge bottle. 15 or 20 feet deep by 10 feet wide, with a narrow neck closed by a stone capsule luted with plaster. About a dozen and a half of these silos, filled in time of plenty with grain, were intended as a reserve of food for seasons of famine, which have more than once befallen the colony.
Starting point is 05:10:44 It was a monopoly for the public benefit, but the plan was discountenanced and disallowed by the home authorities, I suppose because it might interfere with the agricultural interests. These excavations were afterwards used to conserve a supply of fresh water for the island. Some of them are still in existence, and their sights may be readily traced. Such was Cockatoo Island in the later forties when Fitzroy ruled the land and gave his name to the dock mentioned above, and since eclipsed by its big neighbour, the Sutherland. There is still a penal establishment.
Starting point is 05:11:20 there, known to us as Biluella. But the prisoners are only weak phantoms of their fierce and unruly prototypes, drunken disorderlies, no visible means, etc, with a sprinkling of short-time thieves, laricans, and such-like gentry. Many of them old, decrepit folk of both sexes, who hail the jail more as a refuge than a place of punishment, an asylum where regular meals, enforced cleanliness, and a fair amount of work enable them to regain in part their shattered health before once more appearing in society. There are perhaps other islands in our harbour whose stories are worth writing,
Starting point is 05:12:02 but other chroniclers will doubtless be found a discourse upon, goat, spectacle, shark, and the rest of them that may have any tradition attached to their names, ancient or modern. The three strictly historical islands, however, garden, pinch-gut and cockatoo, seem to be the only ones that by their early connection with the history of our city called for special mention in this work. End of Chapter 13
Starting point is 05:12:29 Chapter 14 of Sydney Past and Present by John Arthur Barry. This Librivox recording is in the public domain. Sydney in the 50s In June 1849, the ship Hashemi arrived in Sydney with 212 convicts and immediately the capital was thrown. into a state of the greatest excitement. It's being looked upon as an attempt of Earl Greys to revive transportation. Public meetings were held in the open air, says one writer, close to the gates of the present government house, and on the very site of the old government
Starting point is 05:13:15 house, where Governor Macquarie, whose policy it was to create an upper class from among a population nearly exclusively convict, entertained at his table guests from this order. Under the splendid old scotch furs planted by Captain Philip, the first importer of convicts to these shores, on the very spot where the first convict camp was pitched, their descendants, their compiers, and a few of the free class who had grown rich upon the system, now assemble to launch and listen to anathemas against it. Contemporary newspapers of even date, i.e. June the 18th, 1849, however, without fixing the spot so exactly as does our author
Starting point is 05:13:59 are content with simply saying that the meeting took place at Circular Key. There were at this particular one some 7,000 people present with Mr R. Campbell in the chair. The purpose of the meeting was not only to petition the Queen that Earl Grey should be removed from the head of the colonial department, but also to ask that responsible government should be granted to the colony, also to pass a vote of censure on the governor himself. Let us see how vice-royalty in those days could receive,
Starting point is 05:14:35 if it's so pleased, a deputation of the legions. Mr. Aaron said that the committee did not charge the governor with actual discourtesy, but it was of the cold, repulsive chilling feeling, with which he had received them, that he had acted discourteously, they complained. Two statements that, although some of the cold, at variance, seemed to imply that Sir Charles Fitzroy was rude. The Speaker, continuing, said, He, the Governor, had first affronted the deputation by refusing to see the whole of them,
Starting point is 05:15:10 and he had afterwards kept up the affront by the increasing chilliness of his manner and the deeper sinking of his brows as he gradually retreated from them, although he stood strongly entrenched behind a table where he had stationed himself to receive them. For the truth of this description, he, Mr. A, could vouch, and he would ask the meeting if this was such a reception as should have been given by a governor to the delegates of those from the produce of whose labours he was paid, fed and clothed. At the same time, it must be remembered that the deputation came to Sir Charles with rather a large order, including in it the removal from office of his Sir Charles's own chief.
Starting point is 05:15:54 Earl Grey had promised to send out emigrants and convicts in a certain proportion, but he had only sent the last, and thus was guilty of faithless and arbitrary conduct. And this same speaker, already quoted, demanded at the meeting, that Earl Grey should be at once dismissed Her Majesty's service, and without a character too. There was much talk also about the squatters and much abuse of them, and someone suggested the formation of a colonial nobility and proposed that William Charles Wentworth should be raised to the first rank
Starting point is 05:16:32 under the title of Duke of the Lashon Triangle. Mr. Parks also addressed the meeting, said he, among other things. All they now sought to do, however, was so to reform and remodel the government of the colony that it should live in the affections of the people, a game at which, as we all know, the speaker subsequently took many a hand himself, and with no small measure of success.
Starting point is 05:16:59 Mr. Lowe, afterwards Lord Sherbrook, at this same gathering, made a long and violent speech. Was the governor afraid of his spoons, he asked, or did he fear that some of them, the delegates, might sneak into his cellar and drink his claret, or did he dread them, lest they should take government house by storm, or did he think that six pairs of dirty shoes were quite sufficient at one time to soil the vice-regal carpet? And Sir Charles really seems to have been afraid of a general rising, for the kitchen was garrisoned with infantry, the stables were filled with cavalry, already prepared at the first signal to dash out upon the people, and this because the colonists had come humbly and quietly to remonstrate against an act of injustice.
Starting point is 05:17:50 All of which reads very curiously today. Nothing, however, could have been more decorous or orderly than the conduct of the great meeting we have been speaking of, which finally separated with three cheers for the Queen, three cheers for Mr. Lowe, a groan for Mr. Wentworth, and a groan for the Governor. Strange how that's name of Wentworth, once synonymous with all that represented freedom and progress
Starting point is 05:18:16 should now have so lost its former power, and be held up to obloquy and contempt. And, after all, the Hashemis crowd was simply rushed. Reports of the principal superintendent of convicts on June the 24th, 1849, After the completion of the muster of the prisoners, the men were permitted to make engagements with those persons who were allowed to go on board for the person,
Starting point is 05:18:44 by an order from me. And it seems worthy of remark that, although at the time of the Hashemis arrival, there were four emigrant ships in the harbour containing about a thousand souls, all these men, with the exception of 59, who were removed to Morton Bay and Clarence River, where labour was urgently required,
Starting point is 05:19:05 were hired to respectable householders and sheep farmers, within six days of their being ready to engage, at wages varying from £12 to £6 to £6 to £6,000, £16 a year, and some mechanics at £28 per annum, the boys receiving from £8 to £11 per annum, besides which there are at my office applications from private individuals and others in different parts of the colony for a larger number of this class of labourers than can be supplied by the arrival of several convict ships. Which statement, place side by side with those made by the speakers at the representative
Starting point is 05:19:42 meetings on circular key, seems, to say the least of it, anomalous. Among the applicants for ticket of leave labour, it was alleged that the Bathurst bench of magistrates alone applied for no less than 350 of them. Yet it is said that 15 out of the 19 magistrates composing it signed the petition against the arrival of transportation.
Starting point is 05:20:08 A poet of the day, respecting the burning question, sings, Turn to the spot, An infant nation pleads, Pleads for its rights and injuries unredressed. Beware stern parent, lest oppression's deeds, The arm of retribution should arrest. Rouse all the alien in its gentle breast,
Starting point is 05:20:30 Till freedom's spirit spurns its chains of clay. Shade of departed Grecia here attest. How in thy rugged straits, Thermopyli, the Spartan patriots, bled and died for liberty. Many of these patriots, evidently, were more prepared to foster transportation than to do any bleeding or dying
Starting point is 05:20:52 for the suppression of the system, and thus ended for a time the excitement caused by the advent of the Hashimi. Speaking of parks and addressing the meeting, reminds one that in the Atlas of 1849 appears the following advertisement. Parasol and umbrella repairs, The subscriber, having received a complete assortment of parasol and umbrella furniture from the first house in London,
Starting point is 05:21:22 begs to state that, in all repairs entrusted to him, only new articles will in future be used. Handles, hooks, penrules, etc. in ivory, coquilla, pearl, horn and bone to match any kind of furniture, fitted at ten minutes notice. Henry Parks, ivory-turning, manufacturing and toy warehouse. Number 20, Hunter Street. Number 20 is the shop now occupied by Mr. McCarthy, the well-known chemist. But Parks never seems to have been much of a businessman, although he certainly advertised very freely in the newspapers of the period. Politics and shopkeeping, in a small way, as a rule, do not thrive in company,
Starting point is 05:22:08 especially when represented in the guise of such an ardent, impatient, turbulent, ambitious soul as that of our own Sir Henry. Auction sales seem to have been a feature, even as is the case now, of those times in Sydney, and some of the announcements are amusing. For instance, Messrs Brown and Jones at their mart at 11 o'clock, 150 dozen kangaroo skins, a second-hand gig, ship biscuit, baby linen, damaged ironmongery, bottled fruits, castor oil, canary birds, bohemian glass, accordions, and the effects of a deceased clergyman, comprising roves, etc.
Starting point is 05:22:53 Again, Mr Robinson will have the honour to offer to public competition on Monday the fourth instant, the crow's nest station in the district of Morton Bay with 10,000 sheep, after which arrow roots blacking lime juice lozenges ladies companions jams bath bricks damaged gunny bags turkey figs toothbrushes 12,000 feet of prime cedar plank a four-roomed house an anchor and chain a mare a horse and 20 pigs one more at 3 p.m precisely the newly rigged copper-bottomed clipper Mary Ann well known in the trade, bon gross of egg spoons, a bass, vial, a superior Europe feather bed,
Starting point is 05:23:41 two lots of land, two bales of supercalico, old Tom, soup and bully, toys, cutlery, and a cottage piano. If the framer of these advertisements had purposely tried his hardest to do so,
Starting point is 05:23:55 he could scarcely have got together a more incongruous selection of articles. During these later years, we get glimpses of the social life of the city, lacking in the earlier ones. For instance, one visitor writing of the theatre, says, In decency of demeanour, the audience of the Sydney Theatre Royal is a prodigy compared with that of similar establishments in the seaport towns of the old country.
Starting point is 05:24:24 The gods are particularly well behaved, the dress boxes are always unpeopled, unless an impulse be given by a bespeak, or by the benefit of a favourite. These appeals act as a sort of mental gadfly in society. The herd rushes together with one consent and disports itself with crowded discomfort. And, once more for a month,
Starting point is 05:24:49 perhaps the playgoer, whom a love of drama only attracts, has the house to himself. In the pit of the Sydney Theatre, one misses the numerous bald heads of an European parterre, for the people of New South Wales have not yet had time to grow old. On the other hand,
Starting point is 05:25:07 the eyes of the stranger wander with surprise over the vast numbers of newborn babies, three or four dozen little sucklings taking their natural refection, whilst their mothers seem absorbed in the interest of the peace. Their great long-legged daddies, meanwhile, sprawling over the benches
Starting point is 05:25:26 in the simplest of costumes. A Czech shirt, for instance, wide open at the breast, moleskins and a cabbage tree hat. Well, could the writer revisit Sydney now and enter one of the theatres, he would see enough bald heads in all conscience. Indeed, well-thatched ones are the exception.
Starting point is 05:25:47 We are growing old ever so much too quickly. Nor would he be troubled by the presence of children in arms, or by moleskin trousers and cabbage tree hats. As a specimen of the entertainment, provided for theatrical patrons in the late 40s at the Royal Victoria Theatre. One taken at random from an old paper will give the reader some idea of what used to amuse our citizens and country visitors of half a century ago. It was on the occasion of a benefit to Mr. J. Thompson,
Starting point is 05:26:21 and, by the kind permission of Colonel Desvard, the excellent band of H.M. 99th Regiments will be in attendance and perform several of their most favourite pieces. The first item on the programme was the celebrated and much-admired classical delineation of ancient sculpture, the death of Abel and the Roman gladiators by Master's F and W. Thompson. Then came the solid parts of the performance, in the shape of Luda's much-admired opera in three parts, entitled The Night Dancers. A farce called No Followers,
Starting point is 05:26:59 concluded the entertainment. No prices were mentioned, but tickets were to be had at many shops, and boxes may be secured at the Victoria Hotel. Bush ranging was still rife throughout the colony, and in a Sydney paper of 1850, a writer, commenting on the fact, states that the nursery for such desperadoes may possibly exist in the capital itself. The young idlers of the city, it seemed,
Starting point is 05:27:28 formed themselves into gangs, and took up positions on the roads leading to the interior. A favourite haunt of theirs, by the way, was the bridge already mentioned in a previous article as crossing the creek running into Rushcutter's Bay, and here these youngsters used to lie in wait and stick up smaller boys who had been out in the bush, gathering five corners, a wild berry of the scrub.
Starting point is 05:27:54 Says a writer who had personal experience of one of these pushes. A knife is her. out, and under threats and oaths that would disgrace Norfolk Island, the juniors were compelled to dub up, or are seized and robbed by force. I myself witnessed and enacted Quixote in an act of puerile bushranging of the above nature, a case of robbery with violence. Hurrah for the road, was the motto of these promising youngsters. Spices was the name they were known by,
Starting point is 05:28:26 but the origin of the word appears to be doubtful. On May the 15th, 1851, the papers make an announcement of most vital importance to the future of the colony and the city. This was nothing less than the discovery by Mr Hargraves, a payable gold in the Bathurst district. The story has too often been told to need dilating on here, but a short description of how Sydney took the news may not be out of place. says one who was on the spot. The shops put on entirely new faces, where suited to the wants and tastes of general purchasers were thrust ignominiously out of sight
Starting point is 05:29:10 and articles of outfits for gold hunting only were displayed. Blue and red serge shirts, Californian hats, leather belts, real gold digging gloves, mining boots, blankets, white and scarlet, became the show goods in the fashionable streets, The pavements were lumbered with picks, pans and pots And the gold-washing machine or Virginian cradle
Starting point is 05:29:35 Either to a stranger to our eyes Became in two days a familiar household utensil For scores of them were paraded for purchase From 25 shillings to 40 shillings In front of stores and stalls So that a stranger or an absent-minded person Who had not yet heard the gathering cry of gold gold might have imagined that a sudden and miraculous influx,
Starting point is 05:30:01 a plague, in short, of babies had been poured upon the devoted city. Many folk refused to believe the news, and persisted in calling it a hoax and a cruel one at that. But when from Summerhill Creek, Ophir, Turon and other places, the virgin ore began to flow into Sydney, then indeed the most incredulous were forced to give in and join in the excitement that to lay. literally seethed throughout the city.
Starting point is 05:30:30 The newspapers teamed with advertisements and notices with the description, Waterproof tents for the Eldorado, Quicksilver for amalgamating gold soil, superfine biscuits packed in tins, wines, ails and spirits ready for carriage, spring carts for the diggings, single and double guns and pistols for self-defense, conveyance to Uffier, etc.
Starting point is 05:30:57 Nostrums, and quack medicines took onto themselves a local habitation and a name. Thus we read that, no one who values his health or comfort should proceed to the goldfields without a supply of labour and companies offier cordial. Also, as the colony is now advancing to a state of unprecedented richness and the empire of Australia will yet rival the age called the Golden, the upheld Morgan and company offer their recently compounded cordial,
Starting point is 05:31:26 the elexer of life, which will expand the benumbed veins of the gold-washers. Parties innumerable were made up to journey to the new finds, and such advertisements as the following studied the newspapers. Two strong, able young gentlemen are desirous of joining some respectable parties in making up a proper number for the gold fields. They are prepared to contribute a reasonable sum, address, etc. presently a nugget was found, and we read under the heading of the great Goliath of the Australian diggings. This magnificent specimen of virgin gold just arrived from the offier mines near Bathurst,
Starting point is 05:32:08 weighing about £4, Troy, will be on view this day in the window of Messrs. Bruch and MacDonald, jewellers, George Street, prior to its shipment for London, for the great exhibition of all nations. But this was only a baby nugget compared with other finds later on. As might be expected, Sydney, during the first feverish weeks, talked of nothing but gold, and of the curious effects upon society that its discovery had given rise to. And everywhere, there fell upon the ear, bits of conversation that ran,
Starting point is 05:32:43 Are you going to the diggings? I'm off tomorrow. Have you seen the big nugget? They say you can pick them up all over the place, yonder. Servants? No, I haven't got one left. Coachman cleared out last night, etc. In a week, the streets of the city showed a very perceptible thinning, as people literally stampeded across the Blue Mountains into the land of Promise Beyond. The government, taken by surprise at such a rapid development, had made no provision to meet it in the way, among others, of police protection in the big mining camps. To make matters worse, the 150 mounted police had recently been
Starting point is 05:33:27 disbanded and the greatest difficulty was experienced in getting a score or two of them together again for service on the gold fields. Towards the end of May, Mr Hudson of Sydney, merchant, returned from the diggings with about £1,000 worth of gold, including a 46-ounce nugget. This was afterwards exhibited at the Crystal Palace, London, and did much, we may be sure, towards advertising the colony and its new and valuable product. New, however, only in the sense
Starting point is 05:34:00 of its being publicly worked, inasmuch as it was well known to many people that for some years past, gold in its virgin state had been finding its way into the hands of the city jewelers, who, however, could never be brought to believe that it was indigenous.
Starting point is 05:34:18 And so far back as 1823, It is said that a member of a chain gang, working on the roads near Bathurst, was mercilessly flogged because he was found in possession of a piece of rough gold, which the overseer felt certain was obtained from melted jewelry. Here is the description of a scene on the road to Holmbusch, where the writer was going to attend the races during the early days of the rush. Driving on those two days to Holmbusch, the Epsom of Sydney, I counted nearly 60 drays and come.
Starting point is 05:34:52 carts heavily laden, proceeding westward with tents, rockers, flour, tea, sugar, mining tools, etc. Each accompanied by from four to eight men, half of whom bore firearms. Some looked eager and impatient, some half ashamed of their errand, others sad and thoughtful. They must have thrown all they possessed into the adventure, for most of their equipments were quite new. good stout horses, harness fresh from the saddlers' hands, gay-coloured woollen shirts and comforters, and Californian sombreros of every hue and shape. It was a strange sight, a strange jumble of images.
Starting point is 05:35:35 The mind could hardly reconcile a thoroughly English high road with toll bars and public houses, thoroughly English figures travelling on it to a country racecourse, stagecoaches and four, omnibuses, Tandems, scores of neat private equipages and hack carriages, sporting butchers and publicans, in spicy white chapels, Sydney Cockneys on square-tailed hacks, haples and oranges, cards of the horses, etc.,
Starting point is 05:36:04 with the concurrent stream of oddly loaded drays and other slow-moving vehicles, piled with business-like stores and unfamiliar utensils, and escorted by parties, no less Englishmen, armed to the teeth, clad in a newly adopted dress, utterly indifferent to, and apart from the merry scene of the racecourse.
Starting point is 05:36:26 One's mental obfuscation was hardly cleared up by the reflection that these British men, on this British-looking Turnpike Road, were simply journeying some 150 miles, the distance from London to Manchester, for the purpose of digging gold. As may be imagined,
Starting point is 05:36:45 this sudden and wholesale emigration of all sorts and conditions of men from the capital affected almost every industry more or less adversely, and none perhaps more so than the building trade. Indeed, works of this description, both public and private, almost all came to a standstill for lack of skilled and other labour, and in some cases their completion was delayed for years. Thus, architecturally speaking, the gold outbreak at first benefited Sydney in very small measure, but later on she reaped to the full benefit of it.
Starting point is 05:37:26 End of Chapter 14 Chapter 15 of Sydney Past and Present by John Arthur Barry. This Librivox recording is in the public domain. The 50s and 60s August 3, 1852 was a day remarkable in the day remarkable in the world. the history of Sydney, as that upon which the first mail steamer arrived in port. Her name was the Chusanne, an iron-screws steamer of 720 tonnes, bark-rigged, a beautiful model, and with more the look of a man-of-war than a merchant vessel.
Starting point is 05:38:08 She was rather heavily armed too, carrying a long 32-pounder aft, an 18-pounder forward, and a 12-pounder amid ships. Even under canvas alone, the Chusanne had been. often done her fourteen knots. Melbourne was her first port of call, and off Cape Otway, a seaman was lost overboard and drowned, notwithstanding a plucky attempt at rescue by two passengers, Lieutenant Pasco, RN, and Mr. Bencraft,
Starting point is 05:38:36 who, with four of the crew, got into one of the quarterboats and put off in a very heavy sea. But their efforts were in vain. Indeed, it was with much difficulty, and not until two hours had elapsed, that the steamer was able to pick them up. The Tucson brought a heavy mail and 70,000 pounds in sovereigns. In Melbourne, then all excitements with the gold fever,
Starting point is 05:39:02 a special armed guard was placed on the steamer in order to prevent the crew deserting, as so many others had done. Before the Tucson sailed for Sydney, the governor and some other officials visited her, together with the leading merchants of the city, when Champagne was opened, speeches made, and the commander, Captain Henry Down, heartily congratulated on being the pioneer of steam communication between Australia and the old country. Fessels of the British Navy were, of course,
Starting point is 05:39:33 frequent visitors to Sydney. In 1851 there arrived a crack frigate called the Calliope of 26 guns, besides the Pandora and the Phantom. In 1853 came HMS Herald, 22 guns, with, among her officers, Mr F. Hickson, afterwards so well known as president of our late Marine Board. The 50s two were the years of many of the celebrated clippers, whose names are historical and will live as long as those of the colony, whose wool they bore so swiftly to the little island standing far away in northern seas. Precursor of these was the Bark Phoenician, which in 1849 came out in 91 days, followed by the Walter Hood, and later on by a whole fleet of fast and noble clippers,
Starting point is 05:40:24 the centurion Omar Pasha, Harlaw, Star of Peace, made of Judah, and others whose tall spars lined the sides of circular key, now growing into something worthy of its name. But, though to George Thompson's white star line, must be given pride of place in the work of developing our early commerce. There were vessels besides the ice, Aberdeen Clippers, who traded regularly between Sydney and other Australian ports, to and from British ones.
Starting point is 05:40:57 There were, for instance, the Kate, Eliza and George Marshall, belonging to the firm of Marshall and Eldridge, the Dunbar, wrecked in the later 50s near the gap, the Duncan Dunbar, Dunbar Castle and Phoebe Dunbar, together with the numerous family of Duthys, all vessels of notes in their days, and all in time to give way before such flyers as the Thermopy, the Salamis, Samuel Plymsell and the Patriarch,
Starting point is 05:41:26 all Aberdeen Clippers, and the last named of which made the trip from Sydney to London in 68 days. The inception of our steam fleet has already been referred to, and by now the vessels of the Australasian Steam Navigation Steam Navigation Company were rapidly increasing in number. still in 1845 freight to Melbourne was three pounds per ton and passengers for saloon ten pounds ten shillings intermediate seven pounds and steerage four pounds ten shillings in 1857 the asn vessels consisted of the city of sydney wonga wonga telegraph governor general boomerang yara
Starting point is 05:42:11 Warreta, Shamrock, Illelong, Coleroy, Thistle, Tamar, Ballarat, Samson, Eagle, Rose, Ben Bolt, Brisbane and the City of Melbourne. Some of these are still keeping the sea, old and dirty and rusty, and smothered fore and aft in coal dust, it is true, but still to all appearance fit to last for many more years. When people built ships in those times, they put work into the world. them that was meant to last, and disdained the jerry business that became so common in the trade. By this time, the whale and seal fisheries were becoming diverted from Sydney control into the hands of the Americans, but what with our land products fast increasing in value and quantity, we could well afford to let the somewhat precarious fisheries go.
Starting point is 05:43:06 Intimately bound up with the shipping and produce trade of the city, there is one street that more especially demands a brief notice. At the time of the Queen's accession, Sussex Street was a long, rambling thoroughfare full of gaps. In 1853, nearly all the produce came there from the Hunter River. Dealers in wheat, poultry, potatoes, etc., secured premises as convenient as possible to the wharves, and thus gradually the street grew in size and importance as a market centre. In the 50s there were still but a few houses in it, but it was noted for several big flour mills.
Starting point is 05:43:46 Even then, butter came in large quantities from the south coast. Mr John Pemmel at that time was the principal miller. He used to buy for cash, kept no books, and the receipts were torn up and thrown away. Bullock drays thronged the street, even as horse teams do now. Butter and flour were sent in. in large parcels to Melbourne and the north, and, ever as trade increased,
Starting point is 05:44:13 new businessmen arrived, and set up in the centre of it, until today, the commission and produce houses number considerably over a hundred, and the members of them have always prided themselves on the establishment of an honourable code in their dealings, in which each one's word is his bond. In the making of a bargain between themselves, neither sale notes nor witness to the transaction is considered necessary.
Starting point is 05:44:40 They also pride themselves on having fewer law actions than any other branch of trade in the southern hemisphere. In 1846, the first movement had been made with respect to railway communication in land. At a meeting in Sydney, it was decided to survey a line from Sydney to Gulban. Not for two years, however, did the scheme take practical shape by the formation of the Sydney Railroad and Tramway Company, capital £10,000. The object of the company, as expressed in its circular, was to, at the present,
Starting point is 05:45:17 construct railways to Parramatta and Liverpool, with, later on, extensions to Bathurst and Goulburn. Mr Charles Cooper, afterwards several times Premier of New South Wales, was the first manager. On July the 3rd, 1850, the first sodden. of the new enterprise was cut by the Honourable Mrs Keith Stewart, daughter of Governor of Sir Charles Fitzroy. The spade with which this ceremony was performed was made in Sydney out of Australian iron and is said to be still in possession of the government.
Starting point is 05:45:52 But for some time little or no progress was made. Public opinion did not seem particularly stirred by the notion for one thing, and for another, money did not come in as it had been expected to do. Later on, however, the government took the business in hand. In August 1852, a start had been made by the contractor,
Starting point is 05:46:14 Mr W. Randall, who afterwards completed the line. He began operations in Cleveland Paddock, close to where Mrs. Keith Stewart had performed with the Australian Spade nearly two years before. The first gang consisted of only five men, but presently more were put on,
Starting point is 05:46:33 and the company imagined they were beginning to make headway. Then, as mentioned above, the government stepped in and pushed on the work quite vigorously, compared with the Moribund SR&T Company. In May 1854, the first cargo of iron rails came to hand, and the work progressed rapidly, because hitherto only wooden ones,
Starting point is 05:46:58 which required renewing every two months, had been used. But at last the paramatter-pramater-proprored, portion of the line, or more correctly speaking, the portion as far as the spots where the southern line now branches off, was finished. This was, much to the disgust of the inhabitants at the
Starting point is 05:47:16 junction of the dog trap and Liverpool roads, fully a mile from the centre of the town. And now that the work was actually completed, people seemed doubtful about travelling on the railway, and nervous fears were expressed as to the security of the bridges, rolling stock, etc., etc.
Starting point is 05:47:34 A board was then appointed to report upon the work, and accordingly, five gentlemen tested the line with two first-class carriages and twelve wagons loaded with sand, the whole outfit with engine and tender weighing 130 tonnes. Then the five duly certified that things were safe and invited the public to roll up. To make assurance doubly sure, Sir William Denison and his wife and family took a trip to and fro,
Starting point is 05:48:04 and finally, the opening day was fixed for September the 26th, 1855. On that date, proclaimed a public holiday, the largest crowd yet seen in the colony, assembled at the railway station to witness the starting of the train. Volunteers and friendly societies escorted the governor, and to the sound of a salute of 21 guns, and the waving of flags and handkerchiefs, was inaugurated the beginning of our present railway system,
Starting point is 05:48:34 of some 3,000 miles. Parramatta, much to the surprise of many people, was reached without any accident, and here the governor lunched and congratulatory speeches were made. During the day, 2,000 passengers travelled to and fro by the novel means of locomotion. Six trains a day were run, with fares in three classes for the single journey,
Starting point is 05:49:01 four shillings, three shillings and two shillings, respectively. said a contemporary newspaper, The event of yesterday was the triumph of science, not only over natural difficulties, but of the spirit of enlightenment and civilization, over prejudice and worldly-mindedness. The great agent of civilization, the best and most effective servants of progress,
Starting point is 05:49:26 has been retained by the Antipodean colonies of Australia within the same quarter of a century, to which it became the liverid vassal of civilized Europe. The plant was moderate enough, consisting as it did, of only four engines, eight first-class, 12-second and 12-3-class carriages, with six brake-fans and 60 wagons. At the present date, or rather at the last returns, the rolling stock of the Colony's Railways included 494 engines, 419 tenders,
Starting point is 05:50:01 1,050 passenger carriages, 9,429 goods vehicles, and 141 stock trucks. It is noteworthy that by the failure of private individuals in the first attempt at railway construction in the colony, any private ownership of such undertakings seems to have received its death blow, and thus, with very few exceptions, all railways in these colonies are owned by the state. Possibly the original pioneers might have been more fortunate in their adventure, but for the gold discoveries, which, as already shown, simply paralysed almost every description of industrial enterprise. An interesting fact in connection with the first attempt
Starting point is 05:50:49 is that Sir Alfred Stephen was the first citizen to take shares in the company, an example followed by other leading men, including Messrs Charles Kemp and John Lamb, the last named the president of the president of the company, the Board of Directors. What, with the gold discoveries, the bringing of railway communication and ocean mails, the finishing for all time of transportation to New South Wales, the granting in full of representative government, well these years be called the fruitful 50s. Literature and art too flourished mildly. A curious incident in connection with the former was the publication in 1854 in Sydney of a
Starting point is 05:51:34 book entitled The Diary of a Visit to England. Dr Campbell, the author, was an Irish clergyman of some note in his day as a writer on the history and the church of his country who visited England at various times during the years 1775 to 1792. He made, says Mowbray Morris in his introduction to Boswell's Life of Johnson, Globe Edition, what may be called the provincial's Grand Tour of London, visited the theatres, coffeehouses and auction rooms, heard all the popular preachers, and was introduced to the studios of Reynolds and Gainsborough.
Starting point is 05:52:13 He met Johnson at the Thraleses and elsewhere, besides visiting him at his own house, and, though they seem to have been good friends enough, his portrait of the doctor is certainly not flattering. In directness and vivacity, he sometimes even runs Boswell close, and his diary often supplies an interest commentary on the biography.
Starting point is 05:52:37 The story of how such a work came to be published in an Australian city is interesting. Its existence even, it would appear, was not generally known in England until the publication of an article in the Edinburgh Review, and which was written in 1859, at the instance of, and partly from materials supplied by McCauley. The manuscript, says Morris, had been discovered in one of the offices of the Supreme. Court at Sydney, behind an old press which had not been moved for years.
Starting point is 05:53:09 Its authenticity has fortunately been placed beyond suspicion, and its strange hiding place has been explained by the fact that one of its author's nephews was sheriff and provost marshal of the capital of New South Wales. The stage flourished freely in the 50s. In 1854, Miss Catherine Hayes took the city by storm with her voice, as two years later did G. V. Brook by his acting. At the close of the great tragedy and first engagement, he was presented at Petty's Hotel with a testimonial in the shape of a solid silver candle Arbrem and plateau
Starting point is 05:53:48 with 220 guineas. Whilst Miss Fanny Cathcart, the principal lady who supported him, came in for a diamond bracelet, valued at 70 guineas. To those who succeeded in pleasing them, the citizens of those years were nothing, if not liberal. In the 50s too, Sydney had a patriotic fund. The Crimean War was raging, and money flowed freely in for the relief of the British soldiers fighting in the east. On two successive nights at the Victoria Theatre during July 1855, the proceeds of the performances
Starting point is 05:54:27 were devoted to the patriotic fund and towards the erection of a monument to Captain Cook. A but little heard of contemporary of the Victoria Theatre in these days was the city, which stood in Market Street, exactly opposite the office of the town and country journal. Melodrama of the strongest type used to be played there, and the leading man was an actor who bore the illustrious name of Kemble. Other theatres too, notably the Prince of Waleses, were now in existence,
Starting point is 05:55:00 and what, with such vocalists as Catherine Hayes, Madame Anna Bishop and Sarah Flower and June Matthews, and such actors as G.V. Brook, Nesbit, Coppin and Rogers, it will be seen that Sydney was far from being badly catered for in respect of amusements. On the night of August 20, 1857, the passenger ship, Dunbar, was wrecked at the foot of the cliffs near the South Head Signal Station.
Starting point is 05:55:29 The occurrence has so often been described as to render more than a passing reference to it needless. One curious incident connected, however, with the sad affair may not be generally known. Among the Dumbar's passengers were a Mrs. Egan, her son and daughter. Mr. Egan was a well-known citizen of Sydney, a member of the Legislative Assembly, and an ex-postmaster general. His wife and children had been home for a pleasure trip. Meanwhile, he had built a fine house for their reception at Watson's Bay, and not far from the fatal gap itself.
Starting point is 05:56:05 And there they perished, almost within sight of their new home. Then, as if that were not enough, 13 years later, Mr. Egan, apparently in his usual good health, drove out to the gap on a Sunday afternoon, but up at a hotel there, was found during the night in a comatose condition,
Starting point is 05:56:25 and died the next day. Nearly one might say, on the sight of the loss of his family so many years before. Besides the Egan's, many well-known colonists were lost in the Dunbar, she being a favourite trader and full of passengers. In all,
Starting point is 05:56:43 120 souls perished, and, as will be recollected, only one man, Johnson, a member of the crew, escaped. He was for many years, and until quite lately, keeper of the Nobby's Lighthouse at Newcastle.
Starting point is 05:57:01 In 1857, municipal government was re-established. It will be remembered that although so far back as 1843, a municipal council headed by a mayor had been formed, so badly did the plan work that after something of like an 11 years' failure, they had been superseded by three commissioners, appointed to look after the interests of the citizens of Sydney. They held office for three years,
Starting point is 05:57:28 and it was during this period that the city waterworks were established, established at Botany, in place of Busby's Boar and the old Hyde Park-Loughland Swamp Scheme. A system of underground sewerage was also began by the commissioners. The outlet was to be at Fort Macquarie through a great valve of gunmetal. The late Honourable George Thornton was the first mayor of the Reconstructed Council, which at that time sat in what is now the Oxford Hotel, and a memento of his term of office may still be seen in the big ventilator, to the sewers in Hyde Park, Thornton Smelling Bottle.
Starting point is 05:58:06 This upcast shaft was fitted with a furnace for establishing a draft. It is, however, doubtful weather, after it was handed over by the contractors to the council, a fire was ever lit in it. Of all the stirring events of these well-named fruitful 50s, the discovery of gold was, of course, the most important as affecting Sydney. It created a demand for all sorts of, of wares, whose uses were undreamt of hitherto or regarded as unnecessary. It introduced capital and immigrants into the colony. It opened up the interior and encouraged the
Starting point is 05:58:46 making of roads and railways, and, above all, it increased to a wonderful extent, the value of property. Indeed, the accumulation of wealth in these years became so real, industrial development, both in city and country so extensive, and the transformation of the social conditions of the people so amazing and complete, that the phases of life, as witnessed in the colony during the 50s, resembled more the imaginary scenes of Eastern Fable and the prosaic realities of everyday existence.
Starting point is 05:59:21 Among other matters closely connected with the story of the now rapid growth of our city in these times, with the inauguration and endowment of the university, with its affiliated colleges, the laying the first stone of the Fitzroy Dock, and the establishment of the Sydney branch of the Royal Mint. Mention has already been made of the Constitution of 56, and the efforts made by Parks, Wentworth, Deas Thompson and others
Starting point is 05:59:49 to guard against any undesirable amendments, whilst passing through the English houses, were so practical and energetic that the two last-named politicians actually travelled to England for that purpose. They were, however, unsuccessful. Lord John Russell had returned to the Colonial Office, and he, unlike Mr Chamberlain and our Federation Bill,
Starting point is 06:00:12 simply riddled the measure with amendments. The most important of these was one enabling a bare majority of members in both houses instead of a two-thirds majority to alter the Constitution as they might please. Such a provision, of course, was more than likely to operate as a standing invitation to alter it, and subsequent events very soon showed the truth of this.
Starting point is 06:00:37 Strangely enough, the one feature in the Constitution which provoked the greatest opposition, that of a nominee-house, has never since been touched, although, as we are aware, much discontent has often been expressed with it, right up to date, and in very strong terms too. The draft bill, however, passed through both houses in 55, and became law in that year as a schedule to an imperial act. It was sent on to Governor Young with a dispatch in which Lord John Russell mentions, among other matters,
Starting point is 06:01:13 that he had considered the expediency of inserting clauses to provide for a federal union of the Australian colonies, but had not been able to satisfy himself that the time had come for it. Well, the time has arrived now, nearly half a century later, also the fact. But it seems remarkable that, even then, when the younger colonies were still in the throes of their new birth, the federal idea should have crossed the mind of the great British statesman. End of Chapter 15. Chapter 16 of Sydney Past and Present by John Arthur Barry. This Librivox recording is in the public domain. The 60s and 70s conclusion.
Starting point is 06:02:06 In the early 60s, occurred the largest and most disastrous fire that had ever taken place in Sydney, and which resulted in the total destruction of St. Mary's Cathedral. Says the newspaper of the day, the intelligence of this deplorable catastrophe will cause a thrill of sorrow in the hearts of the Roman Catholic population throughout the country, and must excite feelings of the deepest regrets
Starting point is 06:02:32 in the minds of the community in general. The cost of the building it is thought could not be less than £50,000, but from its hallowed associations and sacred memories it was of priceless value to thousands of worshippers of the Roman Catholic Communion. Besides the building itself, there appears to have been an immense amount of valuable property destroyed, not only in the shape of paintings in the church. One picture representing the death of St. Benedict was alone valued at £1,000. but in the beautiful furniture of the archbishops and other residences belonging to the high dignitaries of the cathedral. Myriads of sparks ascended high into the air and fell in showers in the direction of Woolumaloo Bay, whither for a considerable distance they were driven by the wind. From the top of the cathedral, a cloud of yellow flame and smoke issued,
Starting point is 06:03:27 which shed a lurid luster on all around, and at times so bright was the glare that the minutest objects in the remotest parts of Hyde Park could be seen almost as distinctly as by daylight. As showing the magnitude of the illumination, it may be mentioned that Captain Heselson, now residing in Balmain, but then in command of the steamer,
Starting point is 06:03:51 Yu Yangs, saw the reflection of the fire went off port hacking, and is of opinion that the glare must have been visible over 20 miles out at sea. A noteworthy incident of the fire was the fortunate escape from a horrible death of an old man named Anthony Brady. Brady was, it is said, a hundred and eight years of age and stone blind. He slept under the sacristry, but was rescued just in time to save him perishing in the flames. That the Roman Catholics were, if dismayed, still not disheartened by their losses,
Starting point is 06:04:27 can be shown in no better way than by the noble pile that now stands on the site of the destroyed church, of which Father Therry laid the foundation stone in 1829. Three years after the destruction of the Roman Catholic place of worship, the slow-moving Church of England gathered in thousands to witness the consecration of St Andrew's Cathedral, of which, as far back as 1819, Governor Macquarie had laid the foundation stone. But, and it is important, that this should be remembered when the story of our city comes to be written more in detail.
Starting point is 06:05:03 During the long time the project remained in abeyance, a change of sight was, for some reason or other decided upon, which, many years afterwards, necessitated a relaying of the stone. This ceremony fell to Sir Richard Burke on May 6, 1837, on which date the old foundation stone was removed, and placed in its present position. But even then, not until the same. until January 1856 was the grant from the Crown finally procured,
Starting point is 06:05:33 nor, stranger still, did the church authorities take it up until 1865. The structure seems to have made a little progress after the inception of the undertaking in 1837, but for years the building remained a mere unsightly shell, unroofed and devoid of any architectural beauty. But at last, after all these tedious years, the end came, and assisted by a large body of bishops and clergy, the Metropolitan, the right Reverend Dr. Frederick Parker, opened the building for the performance of divine service.
Starting point is 06:06:09 This was in December 1868, and it seems to have been a very solemn and impressive ceremony indeed, although, even then, the building was not nearly completed. But, as the sumptuous luncheon which took place afterwards at the Masonic Hall, and which was attended by all the most eminent, both of the laity and the clergy in these colonies. The Earl of Belmore said, it was now an edifice of noble proportions, and it had progressed at least so far as to be available
Starting point is 06:06:38 for the worship of God. A great deal remains to be done to finish the exterior, but he had no doubt that ere another generation passed away, the topmost stone were belayed, a hope that we have seen happily fulfilled. In these later sixties, and in the beginning of the 70s, we had the Duke of Edinburgh with us,
Starting point is 06:07:00 and we made much use of him in laying foundation stones and opening public buildings before the unfortunate occurrence of Clontarf. Among other ceremonies of the kind in which H.R.H. took a prominent part was that of the inauguration of the long-deferred statue to Captain Cook.
Starting point is 06:07:19 The papers of the day were, of course, full of the ceremony, which seems to have been attended by all in Sydney. In the cavity of the stone was placed a bottle containing copies of the Sydney Morning Herald and Empire, together with the cards of the officers of the Australian Patriotic Association. With these was also a facsimile of Captain Cook's handwriting, being a lithograph transcription of his log, containing the great navigator's observations on the transit of Venus in 1769.
Starting point is 06:07:52 Referring to the occasion, a newspaper of the same date as the ceremony, says. It is a curious fact that, although the landing place of Captain Cook in Botany Bay is not more than six or seven miles from Sydney, but very few persons have ever visited that secluded spot, or have even a definite idea where it is. This probably arises from the fact that it lies on the southern shores of Botany Bay, at the head of which great inlet from the ocean are two large rivers, terminating in a wild and almost impassable country. and, as we are aware, up till within a year or two, what was thus written over 30 years ago might have still stood good.
Starting point is 06:08:35 But most people now know all about Cornell and the dedication of a public park there to the memory of the discoverer, even if they seldom visit it. In these 60s and 70s, Sydney was progressing at such a rate that to keep in touch with a tithe of the buildings of importance, both public and private, that sprung up, almost as if by magic, would reduce this chapter to a mere record of architectural dates and details.
Starting point is 06:09:04 Moreover, most of these improvements are well within the memory of thousands of citizens still among us, nor did the social characteristics of our city apparently differ much from those of the present. It is most edifying and instructive, for instance, to note the fashion in which the story of our city council was reproduced in one instance, essential particular three generations ago. And the following description might have been written today. Indeed, during the existence of the Citizens Vigilance Committee at the time of the plague, such reports were common enough. A butcher's shop was visited in William Street last week by the inspector of nuisances and the acting health officer conjointly. The time was half an hour
Starting point is 06:09:50 past noon. The back premises were found in filthy condition. The dung heap contained a quantity of hair, etc., and was alive with maggots. There were also a quantity of bones and meat in a state of putrefaction in the shed. The shed itself was filthy, and the premises generally dirty. The duty of the two officers was obviously to proceed, according to the law, against a person who, by his on cleanliness was perilling the lives of his fellow citizens, and it was the duty of all aldermen whose servants in the interests of the public these officers were to support them in the execution of their duty. But then, no more than nowadays, were things managed in that style. The butcher cleaned his premises, knowing that an information was sworn against him. Then,
Starting point is 06:10:39 quite according to our best modern traditions, he got two aldermen to inspect his premises, and one of them to write to the magistrates at the Water Police Court, saying that he had found the place perfectly clean, while the other alderman attended at the court to depose to the same fact, and the testimony of the aldermen carried the day against the public officials. Mr Danzy was the health officer of the period, and the newspaper calls upon him to do his duty in such instances, without fear of aldermen, who may prefer to patronise stinks.
Starting point is 06:11:15 Of what effect the remonstrance was, so far as that particular city council was concerned, as well as to its immediate successes, may be judged from the plague revelations of 1900, and the accumulated masses of filth to which it was principally due. In 1788, there were landed in Sydney some 200 Marines. In 1790, the first detachment of soldiers arrived, and in 1870, Sydney saw the permanent. departure of British soldiers from Australian territory. Although the crowd that witnessed their embarkation on the Silver Eagle was a large one, it watched the proceedings in silence and with an entire absence of enthusiasm.
Starting point is 06:12:02 The troops comprised only two companies of the 18th Line Regiment and about 70 rank and file of the Royal Artillery, who had been hitherto stationed at Dawes Point. They boarded the Silver Eagle at Circular Key, to the music of the band of the Naval Brigade, stationed in the ordnance yard. But though the crowd had increased to vast dimensions, there was not the slightest demonstration.
Starting point is 06:12:28 Perhaps the people felt in some way the departure of these soldiers of the Queen typified an approaching severance from the mother country, and yet, of those silent and perhaps doubtful spectators, the majority must have lived to see native-born Australians in their thousands, embarking to fight overseas for that same queen. In these days, the early 70s, our present post office had been begun,
Starting point is 06:12:55 and the town hall, of which Prince Alfred had laid the foundation stone, was in course of erection. Circular key was a key in reality, although not, of course, equalling its present condition, susceptible of much bettering as that is. Endless improvements were going on everywhere. Prince Alfred and Belmore Parks had been formed and were being beautified. War Park was under process of reclamation.
Starting point is 06:13:23 Hyde Park, so long known to us as the racecourse, bare and uninviting, now possessed an avenue of well-grown trees half a mile long and was dotted with plantations. The domain had been landscape-gardened out of all knowledge. We had newspapers by the dozen, churches by the hundred, banks and other financial institutions by the score, and over 100,000 inhabitants. Besides constant steam communication with England and the sister colonists, Sydney steamers traded regularly to California, New Caledonia and the Fijis,
Starting point is 06:14:01 whilst sailors, hailing out of the port, dotted every sea from the North Pacific to the Indian Ocean. At Miller's point, there was a yard capable of turning out ships of 500,000, ton's burden, and many steamers, both screw and paddle, gunboats and dredges had been built there. The native timber used was, for beams, the iron bark blackbutt, and the flooded blue, red and spotted gums, and for fittings, the tea tree, iron bark, blackbutt, and bungaly. And as showing the wonderful excellence of some of these colonial timbers may be instance the case of the Fanny Fisher built on the Manning River in 18. and by turns whaler, passenger packet and mail carrier,
Starting point is 06:14:48 and now, after her 53 years of service, still afloat as a collier, and in better preservation than many are comparatively new boat. She should be preserved intact when her time comes, and the surveyors shake their heads over her, as a specimen not only of what Australian hardwood is capable of, but as the oldest Australian-built vessel. As to education in these years, it's flourished mightily and spread over all the colony in the shape of 807 schools and 600,000 pupils, with 1,093 teachers. An eloquent commentary on the success of the public school system controlled by the Council of Education.
Starting point is 06:15:33 Writing of the Sydney University, a visitor said, the glory of Sydney in the way of education is its university, and certainly a great deal of spirit has been shown by the colony in the creation of the institution and in the erection of the building. As regards the building, I think no one will dispute the assertion when I say that the college hall or public room, for it is put to none of the comfortable festive uses
Starting point is 06:15:59 for which college halls have been built at our universities, is the finest chamber in the colonies. If I were to say that no college either at Oxford or Cambridge possesses so fine a one, I might possibly be contradicted. In these days, however, from a financial point of view, the university was not a success. The people seemed satisfied with a primary education for their children and did not yearn after a university one. Thus in 1870, the total cost of the establishment, consisting chiefly of professional salaries,
Starting point is 06:16:34 was £5,938 pounds, of which £5,000 was paid out of the taxes of the colony. There were 41 scholars paying a little over £22 per annum each. As for the resident pupils at the affiliated colleges, there was one and only one at St John's, and but two or three at St Paul's. With as yet a very sparse population, we went in for such a scholastic luxury, rather too soon. All young communities are apt to do the same, although not necessarily in the shape of a university.
Starting point is 06:17:13 To quote Anthony Trollope, there is no institution in the colonies which excites and deserves the sympathies of an English traveller more completely than does the Sydney University. This, of course, applying to the time in which he wrote. But of all our educational establishments, the celebrated novelist appears
Starting point is 06:17:34 to have been most impressed with the Fort Street School, where, for his edification, some of the pupils were put through their facings. And certainly, one little girl whom I questioned myself must have understood what she was saying. Anthony had just been astounded by a small boy's feet in mental arithmetic, and jokingly professes a doubt as to whether there might not be collusion with the teacher. A passage in Shakespeare had been read,
Starting point is 06:18:02 in which the word strategy is used in its secondary and not in its technical sense. I asked the meaning of the word, and the little girl said that strategy was the art of military manoeuvring. She was a very nice little girl, and I hope she may live to be the wife of the first commander-in-chief of the forces of New South Wales. In which case, by the way, the nice little girl would have had to marry the right honourable Sir Augustus William Frederick Spencer Loftus, PC, GCB, who was the first to assume the title. Let us hope that Trollope's little girl is still flourishing and happy, although probably in a less exalted position.
Starting point is 06:18:45 But to return, the girls, says he, in some of these public schools, are more wonderful even than the boys. They read better and seem to have a clearer perception of things in general. I remember at such an exhibition in New York, hearing a roomful of girls questioned by the mistress. She asked why the Romans ran away with the Sabine matrons. One girl suggested that it was because the Sabine matrons were pretty, but she was soon taken down by a clearer-headed maiden
Starting point is 06:19:16 who told us that it was done for the sake of the population. The young girls at Sydney were perhaps not quite so far advanced as this, but nevertheless their condition amazed me. Putting aside all joking, I profess that the excellence of the teaching in the Fort Street School at Sydney was very high. Could our good-natured visitor leave his appointed place and return to us once more and inspects the old school? He would probably be more astonished than ever at the advance that has been made there, both in the number of pupils and in the quality of the teaching during his absence. It will be of interest to see what we could do in these years,
Starting point is 06:20:01 towards raising money for imperial charitable purposes. There was then a patriotic fund for the relief of widows and orphans of soldiers and sailors who fell in the Crimean War. To that fund, New South Wales gave 64,916 pounds, 6 shillings and 6 pence. Tasmania, 28,375 pounds, 5 shillings and 7 pence. Victoria, 47,701 pounds, 10 shillings and threpanse, and South Australia, 6,297 pounds. But while the whole of our contributions was voluntary,
Starting point is 06:20:44 40,000 pounds of the Victorian amount was voted by the legislature. In the Indian Mutiny Fund, Victoria comes first with a level 25,000 pounds. New South Wales, 5,821, pounds and south australia 2,803 pounds then comes the cotton famine fund with new south wales to the front again with 21,311 pounds victoria 5,000 pounds and west australia 603 pounds 11 shillings and fivepence in addition australia is credited with a lump sum of 15,739 pounds 12 shillings and a penny which amount was forwarded to the Lord Mayor's Relief Fund. It will thus be seen that this colony, to the extent of £92,048, had, up to the last months of 1870,
Starting point is 06:21:43 responded with splendid liberality to all appeals for help from Great Britain, and has been doing so at intervals ever since then. Still, alongside the cotton famine figures just quoted, those of the late Indian famine fund, Luke poor enough. We have now, however, more calls on our purse. It is doubtful whether today, backed even by the Aegis of a royal prince, we could, in a very short time, gather 28,000 pounds, as was done to commemorate the visit of the Duke of Edinburgh by building a new hospital. Trollope came to us in the early 70s and fell desperately in love with the city,
Starting point is 06:22:26 its people and its surroundings. Unlike some of the latter-day trotter. who have said nice things whilst partaking of our too-ready hospitality, and then gone away and mercilessly abused us. Anthony, although at times he poked a little mild fun at certain of our peculiarities, was, on the whole, very fair and impartial in his comments upon what he saw. In the light of recent events, one in particular of his utterances sounds curiously prophetic. He had been viewing the defences of the harbour,
Starting point is 06:22:59 and was impressed, not only with the different batteries, but with the evident readiness of their defenders to use them in case of need. I hope, says he, that New South Wales may never have to fight for England, and certainly that she may not have to fight America, but the feeling of loyalty in the colony is so strong that were there a fight on hand, she would be unhappy not to be allowed to take some share in it. A remarkable saying, when we consider it,
Starting point is 06:23:29 has made so many years before the spirit of imperialism had been fostered and worked up to its present high pitch, when the sentiment was even discouraged by the British powers that were. It is a pity that Trollope did not live to see how completely his forecast had been justified by the site of not only New South Wales, but Australasia, raising and equipping an army of 20,000 men to fight for the empire overseas.
Starting point is 06:23:57 Moreover, he appears, have visited us with the hope of being pleased and not with the hope of cavilling at and picking holes in us and our institutions. Speaking about the city buildings, he mentions the hospital and St James's Church. The hospital, I was assured, is quite antiquated. It seemed to be airy, easy,
Starting point is 06:24:20 and as pleasant as is compatible with the nature of such an institution. St. James's Church is pewed all around with high dark panels, and is as much like an English comfortless church of the last century as though it's stud in an English town in an eastern county. I went there once and found it impossible to hear a word from the gentlemen who read the lessons or from him who preached. But it is a fashionable church, and is supposed to be that at which the governor and his family should say their prayers.
Starting point is 06:24:53 Well, if our visitor could return, he would find something worthier of the name in place of the old hospital, and though the church still stands externally, much as it did what time it dominated the Sydney landscape, internally, the old things have given way to much that is new. One more remark of Trollops must be quoted, because, although uttered so many years ago, it stands as good today as it did then. Speaking of the Legislative Assembly, he compares it to a pudding. Says he, in the House of Assembly at Sydney.
Starting point is 06:25:27 there was a sufficiency of farinacious matter to prevent the plums from clogging the appetite and hurting the digestion. In drawing this series of articles to a close at this particular epoch in the history of the city, it may be thought necessary to explain that such a fact is not due to want of material respecting the newer Sydney, but because Old Sydney and its story having been fairly well exploited, that of the more recent capital would be lacking in interest for the general reader. Besides, during the last couple of decades or so, there is nothing doubtful, nothing that cannot be verified by a few minutes' search,
Starting point is 06:26:11 whether as to the acts of an individual, the age and position of a building, or the site of a celebration. On the other hand, some of the best authorities differ widely regarding the happenings of those dark old days of storm and stress, through which the infant settlement passed, only to emerge triumphant, the great capital city that we see it today. And if in this little book any new light, no matter how small, has been let in on the doings of those far-off times,
Starting point is 06:26:42 if any disputed point, no matter how apparently trivial, has been advanced towards assurance, then it will not have been written in vain. End of chapter 16. Part 17 of Sydney Past and Present by John Arthur Barry This Librivox recording is in the public domain. The Rock's Resumptions One of the oldest and most picturesque portions of Sydney
Starting point is 06:27:17 will soon be a thing of the past, and before such is the case, a visit to the rocks would well repay many of our citizens who, except by name, know nothing of the neighbourhood, and would care to see how our ancestors, both rich and poor, builded in those far-off days. Hence it is thought
Starting point is 06:27:36 the locality calls for more than the passing notice given to it in the foregoing pages. They still stand, those wonderful old houses, the mansion of the merchants with massive walls, four square, staring out of shadeless windows over the little cottages,
Starting point is 06:27:53 perched in all manner of nooks and corners, weather-worn and scarred, their sandstone steps hollowed by the feet of three generations, but, nevertheless, crouching, sturdy and grimly defiant of the modern city, scarce a stones throw away. Reminiscence to these old mansions of the time
Starting point is 06:28:12 when Dawes Point and its neighbourhood was accounted one of the best residential quarters of the city. The cottages higher up the ridge of the earliest settlement when, as a writer remarks, the rocks were a term synonymous with St. Giles and whopping in one. In those days,
Starting point is 06:28:29 The place seems to have been a mixture of Sailor Town and Alsatia, studied thickly with the most nefarious dens and low pot houses, boasting such expressive names as the Black Dog, the Shear Hulk, the Whalers' Arms, the Struggler, Evening Gun, and the Sailor's Return, this last one still in Cumberland Street. Describing Gloucester Street in the early 50s, a visitor says,
Starting point is 06:28:54 it struck too as we crossed the high bare green by the windmill above St. Phillips and walked, or rather tumbled and climbed, along Gloucester Street to our destination. At this time there could hardly be said to be a street. It was merely the space between two straggling lines of houses ranged along the side of a very rough, rocky declivity, and these were turning their backs or their sides or their faces to each other, a description that, even at the present day, fits aptly enough more than one street on the rocks, if the ground vacants then be filled in with hovels of later growth, with a maze of blind alleys, lanes, courts and passages,
Starting point is 06:29:36 squalid backyards, children by the Legion, and goats by the score. But presently there will be no more Gloucester Street, no more Cambridge Street either. Light and air will be let into spots where they have been long strangers, and one of the finest portions of the city, redeemed from insignificance and decay. Traversing the whole of the resumed area will be three main thoroughfares.
Starting point is 06:30:02 New Harrington Street, 80 feet wide, Princess Street, 130 feet in width, and New Cumberland Street, 80 feet wide, whilst George Street North will be broadened from its present 40 feet to 100. The extra space given to Princess Street is to allow for an elevated railroad connected with the North Shore extension scheme,
Starting point is 06:30:26 as also for the proposed bridge over the harbour. Essex Street is to be widened to 70 feet, and halfway between it and Argyle Street, a new one is to be formed. All these streets will be wood-blocked, and under them it is proposed to construct tunnels to accommodate the sewers, water, gas, electric wires, etc., etc. Argyle Cut will also probably be widened.
Starting point is 06:30:51 several bridges built here and there at intersecting streets in order to make the ascent easy for traffic and practically the whole of the ridge from the observatory downwards will be cut away to a gentle slope at least one gathers so much from the official plan but of course this will be subjected to many changes so much so indeed that it would take a seer to forecast with certainty the appearance of the big contract at its finish years hence
Starting point is 06:31:19 No mention of the resumed area would be complete without some allusion to the notable scheme propounded by the advisory board for the housing of the men who work along the wharves and who reside mainly on or around the rocks in buildings five stories in height and containing between them some 500 families or, say, between 3,000 and 4,000 souls.
Starting point is 06:31:46 One will have frontages to Kent, Windermill and Argyle streets, The other will be in Kent Street somewhere at the foot of the Observatory Reserve. Each tenement will consist of from two to five rooms, lit by electricity, reached by lifts, and as sanitarily perfect as science can make them. In the great basement there will be a library baths and probably shops. The square will enclose a courtyard, common to the use of all. Such, taken as a whole, is the gist of the plans put forward,
Starting point is 06:32:19 whether the Australian working man himself will approve of the scheme has yet to be discovered. In London, tenement houses are common enough and are thoroughly appreciated by the classes for whose benefits they were built. Within the Rocks area are two historical churches, St. Phillips and St. Andrews, the Scots Church. Besides Trinity Church, the fine Roman Catholic one of St. Patrick's, and many large and important buildings, such as warehouses, hotels, etc., etc., that the path of improvement will most likely be conducted so as to spare. Probably, owing to the proximity of wharves along the foreshores of the resumed area, it will always be in great measure a working man's quarter, so far at least as residence is
Starting point is 06:33:08 concerned, although, certainly an ideal one, and possessed of some of the finest views in Sydney. A great commercial quarter it is sure to become when the energetic minister for work has transformed the place than the mere conjury of rookeries that it now mostly consists of into one of broad streets and open spaces, whereon will presently rise piles of warehouses, offices,
Starting point is 06:33:33 handsome shops, and either neat terraces of houses for the working men of the district, or the tenement buildings already spoken of. The public it is considered owe a considerable debt of gratitude to Mr. O'Sullivan for his courage and patient persistence
Starting point is 06:33:48 in promoting a scheme, by which one of the finest parts of our city, hitherto hidden in squalid seclusion, will be thrown open and utilised for the lasting benefit of the community at large, and the commercial prosperity of Sydney in particular. Like all men, the minister is liable at times to err, but in this particular instance he has made no mistake,
Starting point is 06:34:12 and his wide grasp of affairs, is uncompromising energy and determination, together with the no small amount of business ability and enterprise he has brought to bear upon this resumption scheme should ensure the success of an undertaking which, perhaps, in a greater measure than any other, he has put his hand to, must appeal not only to the general public of the present, but to posterity.
Starting point is 06:34:38 End of the Rock's resumption End of Sydney Past and Present by John Arthur Barry.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.