Aesthetics · Architecture · Attachment to place · British colonialism · Built heritag · Church History · Churches · Cobbitty · Colonialism · Commemoration · Community identity · Cowpastures · Cultural Heritage · Cultural icon · Denbigh · England · Fashion · Festivals · Heritage · Historical consciousness · Historical thinking · History · Landscape aesthetics · Living History · Local History · Local Studies · Macarthur · Memorialisation · Memorials · Memory · Monuments · Moveable Heritage · Myths · Place making · Placemaking · Regionalism · Ruralism · Sense of place · Settler colonialism · Settler Society · Small communities · St Paul's Church Cobbitty · St Pauls Church Cobbitty · Storytelling · Urban development · Victorian · Village

Cobbitty Anglican Church, a little bit of England celebrates 190 years

The English-style village of Cobbitty celebrates 190 years of the presence of the Anglican church.

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

Attachment to place · Belonging · Business History · Camden · Camden Story · Campbelltown · Campbelltown Story · Community identity · Cultural Heritage · Cultural icon · Heritage · Historical consciousness · Local History · Local newspapers · Local Studies · Macarthur · Macarthur region · Myths · Narellan Story · Newspapers · Picton · Place · Place making · Placemaking · Sense of place · Stereotypes · Stories · Storytelling · Sydney's rural-urban fringe · Tourism · Urban development · Urban growth · Urban history · urban sprawl · Urbanism · Village

Westies, Bogans and Yobbos. What’s in a name?

The article explores regional identity in Sydney's Macarthur district, focusing on the communities of Campbelltown, Camden, and Picton. It discusses the strong local attachment to identity, which is challenged by perceptions of western Sydney as a cultural wasteland. Jeff McGill’s criticism of regional labeling sparked significant community response, revealing a conflict over identification and stereotypes. While Macarthur's regionalism reflects urban expansion, it struggles for acceptance amidst historical, cultural, and emotional ties that residents hold with their distinct localities.

Active citizenship · Attachment to place · British colonialism · British Heritage · British Red Cross · Camden District · Cobbitty · Community celebrations · Community Engagement · Community Health · Community identity · Community organisations · Community work · Cultural Heritage · First World War · Heritage · History · Holidays · Local History · Memory · Monuments · Mount Hunter · New Year's Sports Day · Place making · Red Cross · Storytelling · Village · Volunteering · Volunteerism · War · War at home · Wartime · World War One

Cobbitty New Year’s Day Village Sports Day Benefits War Effort

Cobbitty Sports Day on New Year's Day, 1915 A major event on the social calendar of a number of picturesque villages in the Camden district was the annual New Year’s Day Sports Carnivals. Cobbitty's St Paul's Anglican Church 1910 (Camden Images) The New Year's Sports Day was part of the English traditions brought to the… Continue reading Cobbitty New Year’s Day Village Sports Day Benefits War Effort