Vaucluse, New South Wales
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Vaucluse Sydney, NSW |
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Vaucluse House |
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| Postcode: | 2030 | ||||||||||||
| Property Value: | AUD $2,767,500 (2007) | ||||||||||||
| Location: | 9 km (6 mi) north-east of Sydney CBD | ||||||||||||
| LGA: | Waverley Council, Municipality of Woollahra | ||||||||||||
| State District: | Vaucluse | ||||||||||||
| Federal Division: | Wentworth | ||||||||||||
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Vaucluse is an eastern suburb of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Vaucluse is located 8 kilometres (5 mi) north-east of the Sydney central business district, in the local government areas of Waverley Council and the Municipality of Woollahra.
Vaucluse is located on the South Head peninsula, with Sydney Harbour on the west and the Pacific Ocean on the east. The Sydney Harbour side of the suburb commands views across the harbour to the Sydney Harbour Bridge. The adjacent suburbs are Watsons Bay, to the north and Rose Bay and Dover Heights to the south.
Vaucluse is a mainly residential suburb. For many years, it was the most affluent suburb in Sydney and in terms of houses and properties is still in the top five most expensive suburbs. Tahiti, a Hawaiian-style residence in tropical gardens above Hermit Bay, set Australian residential record when it sold to a trio of South Africans (the Krok brothers) for more than $29 million in September 2007. [1]
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[edit] History
Before European settlement, the area where Vaucluse is now located was inhabitabed by the Birrabirragal aboriginal clan, who belonged to the coastal Dharug language group. The first European activity in the area took place not long after settlement, when a makeshift signalling station was set up on the ridge overlooking the ocean. Its role was to signal the colony if a ship was approaching. Pilots based at Camp Cove, Watsons Bay, could then meet the ship and guide it through the harbour. A formal signal station was established in 1790, serviced by a bridle trail that later became Old South Head Road in 1811.[2]
Macquarie Lighthouse was constructed on the ridge, a little south of the signal station, in 1816, having been designed by Francis Greenway, the first notable architect in the colony. Residential use of the area also developed. The original Vaucluse House, from which the area derived its name, was built by Sir Henry Browne Hayes, who had been transported to New South Wales for kidnapping the daughter of a wealthy Irish banker’s daughter. When he arrived, in 1802, he was allowed to buy land from that which was granted to Thomas Laycock in 1793 and Robert Cardell in 1795. The house was then acquired by Captain John Piper in 1822. Sir Henry Browne Hayes, an avid admirer of the 14th century poet Petrarch, named the house after Petrarch's poem about the famous Fontaine de Vaucluse near the town L'Isle sur la Sorgue in what is today the Department of Vaucluse in southern France. The small but charming cottage was later taken over by William Charles Wentworth (1790-1872), barrister and explorer, in 1827. Many structural changes and additions were made while he lived there until 1853. The building has fifteen bedrooms, is in the 1830s Gothic style and sits on 27 acres (11 hectares) of gardens. It still survives and is listed on theRegister of the National Estate.[3]
In the early 1840s, the present signal station was built by the Colonial Architect, Mortimer Lewis. It has continued to be used up to the present day for controlling shipping in and out of the harbour. Later in the same decade, more residential development occurred with the construction of Greycliffe House at Shark Beach by a son-in-law of William Charles Wentworth, one of the men who crossed the Blue Mountains. It was a large, sandstone house in the "Victorian Rustic Gothic" style, atttributed to the architect John Hilly.[4] A succession of prominent Sydney identities leased the house during the 19th century. It was gutted by fire in the 1890s but fully restored. It still stands. It is now used as the visitor centre for the Sydney Harbour National Park.
Another substantial residential development was the construction, in 1854-56, of Carrara on the harbour foreshores. Carrara was designed by John Hilly for John Hosking, the first Lord Mayor of Sydney. The house featured verandahs with Doric columns and was situated to take advantage of the harbour views. Its name was changed to Strickland House in 1915, when it was turned into a convalescent home for women.[5]
By 1871, the colony was experiencing the "Russian scare" that prevailed at the time, as a result of which fortifications were built at Steel Point, just a little north-west of Carrara. Cannon emplacements, powder magazine and embrasures, plus a store and barrack rooms, were constructed at this strategic point overlooking the harbour. The buildings were made of sandstone found at the site and still survive today; they are listed on the Register of the National Estate.[6]
Not long afterwards, Mortimer Lewis was designing a tomb for the Wentworth family. W.C.Wentworth died in England in 1872 and his remains were interred in the Victorian Gothic mausoleum that was constructed in Chapel Road, Vaucluse. Made of sandstone, the building featured a stained glass window in the west end and a clerestory window above the door. Around about the same time, Edward Mason Hunt was busy designing a Victorian Gothic mansion south of Carrara. This two-storey sandstone home incorporated a much smaller home built at that site by Alexander Dick, circa 1840; that home changed hands in 1868 and enlargement proceeded. The new mansion, known as The Hermitage, featured multiple gables, a castellated tower and prominent fretwork. It was damaged by fire in 1936 but was restored by Emil Sodersten. It was bought in 1964 by the Woolworths company, which used it for some time as a training facility.[7]
Just a little east of The Hermitage, St Michael's Church of England went up in 1877, after being designed by Edmund Blacket. Located in St Michael's Place, this new sandstone church would later be enlarged in the 1930s, with the addition of a new spire, by Professor Leslie Wilkinson. The new design would eventually win the Sulman Prize for architecture in 1942.
By the 1880s, Greenway's Macquarie Lighthouse was in bad repair. In 1883, the Colonial Architect of the day, James Barnet, built a new lighthouse which was virtually a perfect replica of the original one, and the original was demolished. Other buildings making up the group were the lighthousekeeper's cottage, built circa 1883, and Greenway's keeper's cottage, dating from circa 1840. There are also remains of courtyards to earlier cottages and the stone base wall of the original lighthouse. The entire group is listed on the Register of the National Estate.[8]
One of the most prominent landmarks in the area is the Convent of the Sacred Heart, which overlooks Rose Bay and can be seen from many vantage points around Sydney Harbour. The site was originally occupied by a house called Claremont, which was built in 1852. The convent incorporated this house when it was built in 1888. Designed by John Horbury Hunt, the new building was five storeys and made of sandstone that was quarried at the site. It included a Gothic Revival Chapel and is regarded as one of Hunt's most successful creations. It now houses the Kincoppal-Rose Bay school for girls.
Hunt's last commission was a memorial to Sir John Robertson, former Premier of New South Wales. The memorial is shaped like a cone with two sections, the bottom of which commemorates Robertson's wife, while the top half commemorates Robertson himself. The memorial is situated in South Head Cemetery, at the junction of New South Head Road and Old South Head Road, in Vaucluse.
[edit] Landmarks
The Macquarie Lighthouse sits prominently on the eastern side of the suburb, at Dunbar Head. Vaucluse House is a historic home managed by the Historic Houses Trust.It is situated in Wentworth Road, with views across Sydney Harbour.
South Head Cemetery is situated at the junction of New South Head Road and Old South Head Road, Vaucluse, New South Wales. Although it is in Vaucluse, which is in the Woollahra municipality, it is administered by Waverley Council and is a companion cemetery to Waverley Cemetery.
The cemetery was established well before 1869 to cater for the needs of the population in the growing Vaucluse area. It was run for some time by a private trust, but management was transferred to Waverley Council in the 1940s. It covers an expanse of four acres and contains the graves of 6,000 people as of 2008.[9] There are a number of well-known people interred at the cemetery, including Sir John Robertson, former Premier of New South Wales; Frank Packer, newspaper proprietor, and other members of the Packer family; members of the Fairfax family, also newspaper proprietors; Sir Walter Edward Davidson, former Governor of New South Wales; the architect Howard Joseland; and Juanita Nielsen, who disappeared in mysterious circumstances in 1975, presumed murdered.
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Sir John Robertson grave, designed by John Horbury Hunt |
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[edit] References
- ^ Topical paradise fetches $29m - National - smh.com.au
- ^ Walks in the Sydney Harbour National Park, Neil Paton (Kangaroo Press) 1987, p.58
- ^ The Heritage of Australia, Macmillan Company, 1981, p. 2/135
- ^ A Pictorial Guide to Identifying Australian Architecture, Richard Apperly (Angus and Robertson) 1994, p.90
- ^ Walks in the Sydney Harbour National Park, p.56
- ^ The Heritage of Australia, p.2/134
- ^ Walks in the Sydney Harbour National Park, p.54
- ^ The Heritage of Australia, p.2/138
- ^ Waverley Council Website:Retrieved 6th November 2008
- The Book of Sydney Suburbs, Compiled by Frances Pollon, Angus & Robertson Publishers, 1990, Published in Australia ISBN 0-207-14495-8, page 259
[edit] External links
- Google map: Vaucluse
- Historic Houses Trust Vaucluse House
- Vaucluse, New South Wales is at coordinates Coordinates:
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