Meadowbank is a suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Meadowbank is a suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Meadowbank is located 15 kilometres north west of the Sydney central business district, in the local government area of the City of Ryde and part of the Northern Sydney region. Meadowbank sits in a valley on the northern bank of the Parramatta River.
History
Aboriginal culture
The territory from Sydney Cove to Parramatta, on the northern side of the Parramatta River, was thought to be that of the Wallumattagal, and had the aboriginal name Wallumetta, the territory of the Wallumede people.
Aboriginal people in the Sydney district were clans of larger groups sharing a common language. Three language groups have been identified in the Sydney Region - the Kuringgai (or Guringai), the Dharug (or Dharruk / Dharuk / Darug), and the Dharawal (or Tharawal). The Wallumedegal are thought to have been within the Dharug speaking area.
European settlement
Land originally granted to Surgeon William Balmain in 1794, in the district of the Field of Mars, was bestowed the name 'Meadow Bank'. Balmain returned to England in 1801, leaving his estates to be managed by fellow surgeon D'Arcy Wentworth. Wentworth agreed to sell Balmain's grants to John Bennett, an ex-convict who had been transported in 1795. By 1819 both the 'Meadow Bank Estate' and 'Chatham Farm' to the north, belonged to Bennett. In 1823 he was joined by his nephew William Bennett. John Bennett died in July 1829, a bachelor, and his nephew inherited his estate, building Meadowbank House around 1835. William then sold 'Chatham Farm' to Major Edward Darvall in 1855. William Bennett died in 1865 but his widow remained at Meadowbank until her death in 1879. The estate was subdivided in the late 1880s, given impetus by the opening of the railway from Strathfield to Hornsby in 1886. The station opened here was called Hellenic but this was later changed to Meadowbank, after the Meadowbank Estate.Meadowbank Public Baths established in 1895 was a former recreation destination but were closed in 1943 due to pollution from Homebush Bay. Shepherds Bay Row Boat ferry services were established as early as 1794 from Schooner Wharf (Belmore Road, near Helene Park) taking passengers to the Concord shore.
Meadowbank Manufacturing Company Works was the first industry in Meadowbank, established on 95 acres of land in 1890, with frontage to the Parramatta River and easy access to the railway producing agricultural equipment for the local area and throughout the country.The existing seawall is made from the remnants of the original sandstone.Shepherds Bay is named after early settler James Shepherd, transported as a convict in 1791.Vineyard terraces were located on the upper slopes.Former Ryde Wharf and punt located in Shepherds Bay Park.Remnants of wharf walling visible at low tide.The Ryde to Rhodes punt operated between 1898 and 1935.Passengers included employees of the State Timber yards at Rhodes and cattle.The punt was unreliable; "the cable continually gave way and cargoes of cattle went sailing downstream".
Ryde Council investigated potential sites for the Ryde Baths in 1877 and the desirability of having public baths.Ten years later, when a man was killed whilst bathing at Ryde Wharf, the issue was raised again.In 1904, a site was chosen at the bottom of Waterview Road.The Ryde Swimming Baths were opened in 1905.Mixed bathing was not permitted.Ryde Bridge took two years to build, and opened in 1935. A series of tolls were applied and were ceased to be collected in 1949.State Timber Yards were opposite on Rhodes Peninsula.
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