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Sydney’s Royal Botanic Gardens

The Royal Botanic Gardens in Sydney, Australia, cover 29 hectares of gardens and 51 hectares of surrounding parkland. Established in 1816, it is the oldest colonial botanic garden in Australia, attracting 4 million visitors annually. With historical significance dating back to 1788, the Gardens reflect changing landscape styles and serve as a popular public space.

Appin · Architecture · Attachment to place · Australia · British colonialism · Campbelltown · Colonial frontier · Colonialism · Communications · Community identity · Cowpastures · Cultural Heritage · Cultural icon · Curtilage · Dairying · Farming · Frontier violence · Governor Macquarie · Heritage · Historical consciousness · Historical Research · Historical thinking · History · Landscape aesthetics · Local History · Local Studies · Macarthur · Monuments · Place making · Ruralism · Sense of place · Settler colonialism · Sydney's rural-urban fringe · Town planning · Transport · Urban growth · Urban Planning · urban sprawl · Urbanism · Victorian

Beulah and Sydney’s Urban Sprawl

Beulah estate, Sydney's urban sprawl and the Appin Road

Aesthetics · Architecture · Attachment to place · Campbelltown · Colonialism · Community identity · Cultural Heritage · Cultural icon · Edwardian · Entertainment · Farming · Fashion · Georgian · Heritage · Historical consciousness · Historical thinking · History · Hotels · Interwar · Leisure · Local History · Lost Sydney · Macarthur · Memory · Modernism · Place making · Railway · Retailing · Ruralism · Sense of place · Settler colonialism · Streetscapes · Sydney's rural-urban fringe · Tourism · Town planning · Urban growth · Urban Planning · urban sprawl · Urbanism · Victorian

Lost Campbelltown heritage

The lost built heritage of a country town on Sydney's urban fringe at Campbelltown

Agriculture · Attachment to place · Belonging · Camden · Churches · Colonialism · Community identity · Cowpastures · Cultural Heritage · Elderslie · Farming · Hawkesbury-Nepean river · Heritage · Horticulture · John Oxley · Landscape · Local History · Local Studies · Pioneers · Place making · Railway · Sense of place · Settler colonialism · Settler Society · St Mark's Church Elderslie · Storytelling · Sydney's rural-urban fringe · Urban development · Urban growth · Urban Planning · urban sprawl · Urbanism · Village

Elderslie, a suburb on Sydney’s fringe

A history of continuity and change Elderslie is a suburb of Camden, the traditional land of the Dharawal people.  It lies on the southern end of the Camden Municipality, 62 km southwest of Sydney, on the rural-urban fringe. Elderslie borders the Nepean River to the west, Narellan Creek to the north, Camden By-Pass to the… Continue reading Elderslie, a suburb on Sydney’s fringe

Appin · Colonialism · Governor Macquarie

Was Governor Lachlan Macquarie a terrorist?

In The Guardian Australia online this week there has appeared an article that asks the question: 'Was Governor Lachlan Macquarie a terrorist?' Paul Daley writes: Macquarie is the Australian leader who used terrorism and slaughter to quell hostile Indigenous resistance to invasion and dispossession. The colonial frontier was a violent location and many people suffered… Continue reading Was Governor Lachlan Macquarie a terrorist?

Aesthetics · Agriculture · Attachment to place · Australia · Belonging · British colonialism · Colonial Camden · Colonial frontier · Colonialism · Community identity · Convicts · Cowpastures · Cultural Heritage · Cultural icon · Curtilage · Economy · Elderslie · England · Farming · Frontier violence · Georgian · Gothic · Heritage · Historical consciousness · Historical Research · Historical thinking · History · Landscape · Landscape aesthetics · Local History · Local Studies · Macarthur · Narellan · Place making · Ruralism · Sense of place · Settler colonialism · Storytelling · Stuart Park Wollongong

John Hawdon of Elderslie in a settler society

John Hawdon of Elderslie was part of the story of settler colonialism in New South Wales in the early 19th century.

British colonialism · Camden · Camden Story · Colonial Camden · Colonialism · Commemoration · Communications · Community identity · Cowpastures · Cowpastures Bicentennial · Cultural and Heritage Tourism · Cultural Heritage · Cultural icon · Dharawal · European Exceptionalism · Frontier violence · Governor Macquarie · Heritage · History · Landscape · Landscape aesthetics · Legends · Local History · Macarthur · Memorial · Memorialisation · Memorials · Memory · Monuments · Place making · Settler colonialism · Settler Society · Stereotypes · Storytelling · Symbolism · Trauma · Uncategorized

Governor Macquarie’s visit to the Cowpasture 1810

In November 1810, Governor Lachlan Macquarie (1762-1824) and Mrs Elizabeth Macquarie visited the Cowpastures. On that occasion, the Governor and Elizabeth Macarthur met the Dharawal people.

Architecture · Art · Attachment to place · Cafes · Camden · Camden Airfield · Camden Gasworks · Camden High School · Camden Museum · Cobbitty · Colonial Camden · Colonialism · Community identity · Convalescent hospital · Convicts · Cowpastures · Edwardian · Elderslie · England · Entertainment · Farming · Fashion · Festivals · Heritage · Historical consciousness · Historical Research · Historical thinking · History · Interwar · Landscape aesthetics · Leisure · Local History · Local newspapers · Macarthur · Memorials · Menangle · Modernism · Monuments · Movies · Narellan · Newspapers · Philanthropy · Place making · Red Cross · Retailing · Second World War · Sense of place · Sydney's rural-urban fringe · Tourism · Volunteering · War

Camden Bibliography a Biography of a Country Town

Camden Bibliography is a list of primary and secondary sources of the Camden township and district.

Agricultural heritage · Agriculture · Agriculture history · Attachment to place · Belgenny Farm · Belonging · Camden Story · Colonial Camden · Colonial frontier · Colonialism · Commemoration · Community celebrations · Community Engagement · Community identity · Cowpastures · Cowpastures Bicentennial · Cowpastures Estates · Cowpastures Gentry · Cowpastures River · Cultural Heritage · Entertainment · Festivals · Hawkesbury-Nepean river · Historical Research · Leisure · Local Studies · Lost Camden · Memorial · Memorialisation · Memorials · Memory · Monuments · Pioneers · Place making · Sense of place · Settler Society · Uncategorized

Cowpastures Bicentennial Celebrations 1995, the beginning of a settler society

Local festival In 1995, the Camden community held a 12-month programme of events to celebrate the bicentennial of the naming of the Cow Pastures by Governor Hunter in 1795 and the discovery of 61 head of wild cattle. The discovery of the cattle herd was an important event in the life of the fledgling colony… Continue reading Cowpastures Bicentennial Celebrations 1995, the beginning of a settler society

1930s · Agricultural heritage · Agriculture · Attachment to place · Australia · Belgenny Farm · British colonialism · Camden Festivals · Camden Park Estate · Camden Park House and Garden · Camden Story · Colonial Australia · Colonial Camden · Colonial frontier · Colonialism · Cowpastures · Cowpastures district · Cowpastures Estates · Cowpastures Gentry · Cowpastures Region · Cultural Heritage · Cultural icon · Dairying · Elizabeth Farm · England · Family history · Farming · Farming history · Governor Macquarie · History · Interwar · Johm Macarthur · Legends · Local History · Local Studies · Macarthur · Macarthur family · Memory · Monuments · Myths · Pioneers · Place making · Placemaking · Ruralism · Sense of place · Settler colonialism · Storytelling

John Macarthur, Father of Australia’s Wool Industry, fact or fiction

John Macarthur is credited with establishing fine wool as a key industry in New South Wales. During the interwar period, it was claimed that he was the father of the Australian wool industry. While significant, his contributions are part of a larger narrative involving many key figures in the industry. His legacy includes commemorative postage stamps, as well as his portrayal in literature and festivals celebrating wool production.