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Stanmore, New South Wales

 
Wikipedia: Stanmore, New South Wales
Stanmore
SydneyNew South Wales
Stanmore2.JPG
Percival Street and Salisbury Road intersection
Population: 7151 (2006 census)
Postcode: 2048
Area: 1.2 km² (0.5 sq mi)
Location: 6 km (4 mi) south-west of Sydney CBD
LGA: Marrickville Council
State District: Marrickville
Federal Division: Grayndler
Suburbs around Stanmore:
Leichhardt Annandale Camperdown
Petersham Stanmore Newtown
Petersham Marrickville Enmore

Stanmore is a suburb in the inner-west of Sydney, in New South Wales, Australia. Stanmore is located 6 kilometres south-west of the Sydney central business district and is part of the local government area of Marrickville Council.

Contents

History

Stanmore was named by a prosperous saddler, John Jones, who purchased land in 1835 where Newington College now stands and called it the Stanmore Estate. Jones named it after his birthplace of Stanmore, a north London suburb. Land n the present Stanmore area was first allocated to colonial officers by Governor Phillip between 1793 and 1810. Thomas Rowley owned Kingston Farm which occupied the eastern half of Stanmore and much of Newtown, and a portion of George Johnston's Annandale estate covered the area south of Parramatta Road containing Annandale House built in 1799 on the hill between Macaulay and Albany Roads. It was from here where Johnston marched with his troops to Castle Hill on 5 March 1804 to quell the convict revolt and where he rode on 26 January 1808 to arrest Governor Bligh during the Rum Rebellion. [1] The first Norfolk pines on the Australian mainland were planted along the line of Percival Road, leading to Parramatta Road by Lt Colonel George Johnston.

Stamnore Road was constructed in 1835 and early development occurred in this area. In 1855, the railway divided Stanmore in to areas known as North and West Kingston north of the railway, and South Kingston south of the railway. The Kingston Farm had been sold to James Holt in 1835, and North Kingston was subdivided in 1854. South Kingston (between the railway and Stanmore Rd) was slowly subdivided from 1857 with isolated large houses built between 1860 and 1870. It was not until the late 1800s that the name Stanmore came into more regular use, replacing Kingston. Municipal boundaries established in 1861 and 1871 placed most of Stanmore into the Municipality of Petersham, with the area south of Stanmore Rd placed into the Municipality of Marrickville. In 1878, Stanmore railway station was established and the streets west of Percival Rd were laid out. More intensive development subsequently occurred in this area and the name Stanmore slowly moved northwards from Stanmore to Parramatta Roads. Stanmore became a desirable location, booming in the 1880s and 1890s with the opening of Newington College and the Percival Road shopping area. The naming of streets after English colonies between Derby and Stafford streets reflected the English values of the time. The final subdivision of Johnston's South Annandale estate took place in 1905, and building was not completed until 1916-1918. Annandale House was demolished in 1905, and Weekley Park was established on land donated by the Johnston family.[2]

A small amount of light industry was established in the early 1920's in the area close to Parramatta Rd, including H Small and Co, a chocolate maker opening in 1928, and Starkeys Cordials. Both establishments have now closed with their premises converted into offices and apartments.

Commercial Area and Transport

Stanmore railway station is on the Inner West line of the CityRail network. Stanmore has a small shopping centre beside Stanmore railway station. Commercial developments also run along the length of Parramatta Road. The Olympia Milk Bar is located on Parramatta Road, while the Globe Theatre was a local landmark which is now demolished.

Olympia Milk Bar

The Olympia Milk Bar is a cultural icon situated on Sydney's main traffic artery, Parramatta Road, Stanmore. Considerable folk lore has built up about the aged proprietor and the opening hours of the Olympia.[citation needed]

The interior of the Olympia is much like a time capsule, albeit a quite poorly lit one. There are displays of old chocolate boxes and vintage advertisements around the shop. The milk bar contains facilities for making milk shakes and ice creams, but the selection of chocolate bars now seems to be fairly limited. The Stanmore Cinema was formerly adjacent to the premises, but was demolished in 2002. The upper floor of the building once contained a hair salon, known as the Olympia Salon.[citation needed]

The owner is the inspiration for the song "Dr Death" by Sydney garage band Sheik The Shayk. An excerpt from an upcoming novel by Anthony Macris (Capital, Volume One, Part Two) features an exhaustively detailed description of the premises [3]. Further detailed descriptions of the owner and the premises can be found in the book Strawberry Hills Forever by Vanessa Berry.

Schools

Stanmore Public School
Founders' Wing, Newington College

Stanmore is home to Newington College, an independent GPS boys school, the state primary Stanmore Public School [4] and Saint Michael's Catholic Primary. Of Stanmore Public School's design by Blackman and Parkes the architectural historian Morton Herman said [5] :

... the whole building is a very pleasant essay in correct and simple classicism, with the triple stairs giving unexpected dignity.

A bequest, by John Jones, of land at Stanmore, saw Newington College move to the newly fashionable inner-city suburbs in 1880 from Silverwater, New South Wales where the school was founded in 1863. Seventy school and theological students migrated from Silverwater to Stanmore, and took residence in the grand stone edifice, designed by Thomas Rowe, that is still the centrepiece of Newington. Morton Herman said of Rowe's design, [6] :

... the 1881 building is an almost perfect example of scholastic Gothic Revival architecture

Also in the grounds of Newington is the Methodist church built in 1874. Designed by Thomas Rowe, it is built from sandstone rubble and dressed stone quoins and features a shingle spire. It was used by the Methodist congregation until a larger church was built in 1883 and it became the church hall. It is now used as a drama theatre by Newington and is listed on the Register of the National Estate.[7] A gymnasium was built in 1890, and a swimming pool was opened in 1894. Newington ceased to be a Methodist theological training college in 1913, when Leigh College was founded at Enfield. In 1921, a stone War Memorial, designed by Old Newingtonian William Hardy Wilson, was opened in memory of those old boys who had paid the supreme sacrifice in World War I. A separate preparatory school was first opened in 1921, after a bequest by Sir Samuel McCaughey. It became known as Wyvern House in 1938, when a new building was opened by Old Newingtonian Sir Percival Halse Rogers. Since the Second World War, the College buildings and facilities have expanded significantly. A new Physical Education Centre, opened by Old Newingtonian Nick Farr-Jones AM, opened in 1993 is one of the more recent buildings. In 1995 the Adult Deaf Society Headquarters in Cambridge Street, Stanmore, were purchased for the relocation of Wyvern House to a stand-alone campus. The new Wyvern House was opened by the Governor of New South Wales, His Excellency Gordon Samuels AC in 1998. It was largely designed and built as a primary school but incorporates Dey House, built in 1954, and the Stanmore Deaf Centre, built in 1975. [8], and an adjoining substantial villa of the Victorian era. In 2009, Newington purchased the adjoining Cambridge Street site of Mary Andrews College. The property will be leased back to its previous owner for the first twelve months whilst plans are formulated for its redevelopment. This 5000 square metre property will greatly expand the current Wyvern campus. [9] The new site contains two Victorian style homes and a coach house and from 1946 until 1992 was the Braeside Church of England Hospital owned by the Anglican Deaconess Institution, Sydney. From 1997, the site became an additional campus of Mary Andrews College and provided residential accommodation. [10]

Churches

  • St Michaels Catholic Church.
  • St Augustines Anglican Church.
  • West Kingston Uniting Church.

Notable residents

John Gowing's home
Lyndhurst
Middleton Street, Stanmore

References

  1. ^ The Book of Sydney Suburbs, Compiled by Frances Pollen, Angus & Robertson Publishers, 1990, Published in Australia ISBN 0-207-14495-8, page 246
  2. ^ Cashman, R and Meader, C. Marrickville- Rural outpost to inner City. Hale & Iremonger Pty Ltd, 1997. ISBN 0-86806-639-7.
  3. ^ Anthony Macris (July, 2000). "The Olympia". Jacket Magazine. http://jacketmagazine.com/12/macris-olympia.html. 
  4. ^ Stanmore Public School
  5. ^ The Architecture of Victorian Sydney (Syd, 1956)pp 76
  6. ^ The Architecture of Victorian Sydney (Syd, 1956)pp 76
  7. ^ Register of the National Estate:Retrieved 9th April, 2008
  8. ^ Deaf Society - Annual Report 2003
  9. ^ The Wyvern Newsletter - 12 February 2009
  10. ^ Hope Healthcare - Annual Report 2005-2006

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