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 · 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.