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1 History  





2 Description  





3 References  



3.1  Bibliography  
















Lydham Hall







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Coordinates: 33°5642S 151°0748E / 33.9449°S 151.1301°E / -33.9449; 151.1301
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Lydham Hall
Location18 Lydham Avenue, Rockdale, New South Wales, Australia
Coordinates33°56′42S 151°07′48E / 33.9449°S 151.1301°E / -33.9449; 151.1301
Builtafter 1861
OwnerBayside Council
Websitestgeorgehistsoc.org.au/lydham-hall/

New South Wales Heritage Register

Official nameLydham Hall; Lydham; Lydham Hill; Lydham Hall Museum; Lydham Hall Historic House and Museum
TypeState heritage (built)
Designated2 April 1999
Reference no.477
TypeHouse
CategoryMuseum
Lydham Hall is located in Sydney
Lydham Hall

Location of Lydham Hall in Sydney

Lydham Hall is a state heritage-listed former rural residence at 18 Lydham Avenue, RockdaleinNew South Wales, Australia. The house is currently used as a local museum holding a collection of furniture and objects dated from the 1860s. Run by the St George Historical Society, it is opened to the public on the first Sunday of every month.

The parcel of land where the house now stands was originally part of the 1200 acres named Bexley granted to James Chandler. Joseph Davis purchased the site in November 1859. The property was initially named Lidham Hill, but the house within the current land parcel later became known as Lydham Hall. The building was completed in 1878-1879.[1] It stands on the highest point of land between the Cooks River and the Georges River. The street previously known as Joseph Street was re-named Lydham Avenue in 1917 at the request of one of the neighbouring property owners. In 1970, Lydham Hall was purchased by the Rockdale Municipal Council. Since the 2016 council amalgamation, the property has been owned by the Bayside Council. Initially, Permanent Conservation Order No 477 in pursuance of section 44 of the Heritage Act 1977 was applied to the property on 20 August 1986.[2] Since the implementation of the New South Wales State Heritage Register in 1999, Lydham Hall has been included on the State Heritage Register[1]: 5  and Council's Local Environmental Plan.[citation needed]

History[edit]

The parcel of land on which Lydham Hall stands was part of the original 1200 acres of land granted to James Chandler on 19 October 1831, which was named Bexley. Chandler's agricultural ventures were not successful and eventually the property was mortgaged, subdivided and sold.

On 1 November 1859, wealthy master butcher, Joseph Davis bought 67 acres of Chandler's original grant. Davis used the property for resting and fattening cattle before slaughtering them in his Arncliffe slaughter-house and boiling down work on land he purchased six months earlier.[2]

Joseph Davis was born in the village of BredeinSussex in 1826, came to New South Wales in 1847 and set up business in Newtown, possibly first as a publican and then as a butcher. On 28 October 1850, he married 17 year old Ellen Turner at Scots Church, Sydney. They had seven children, all born between 1851 and 1875.

Davis was also a prominent man in Bexley and a generous benefactor to Christ Church, Bexley. He was one of the petitioners who advocated for the established of a local school in the area in 1887. This educational establishment known now as Bexley Public School opened in 1888.[1]

Davis engaged local Swedish stonemasons, the Benson brothers, to construct a house on the highest point of the estate to have sweeping views of Botany Bay. The house was built "sometime between 1872 and 1879 with its completion and opening taking place between 10 June 1878 and 10 June 1879 or very shortly afterwards".[1]

In 1882, Davis applied to convert the land to Torrens Title, and began to subdivide and sell his land. The streets formed as a result of this subdivision were named after Davis' two youngest sons, Frederick and Herbert, and his eldest grandson, Clarence.

After Joseph Davis' death, Ellen Davis finalised the subsequent subdivision and sold Lydham Hill to Frederick Gibbins, a successful oyster merchant and trawling magnate, who lived nearby at Dappeto (now known as Macquarie Lodge). Ellen Davis moved to Newtown and died at Kensington House, 98 Wilson Street, Newtown, in 1906. Davis' second son, also Joseph Davis, ran the original butcher's shop at 255-257 King Street, Newtown.[2]

Gibbins leased out Lydham Hill up until 1907. When his daughter Ada married David George Stead, a widower and father of Australian writer Christina Stead,[3] the newly-weds and Christina settled in Lydham Hill, paying "a very small rent".[2]: 27 

During the following ten years, Ada gave birth to six children. A great storyteller, young Christina would entertain her half brothers and sisters with tales and poems. A few of Christina's short stories and her most known and popular work, The Man Who Loved Children, were based on her experiences while living in Lydham Hall in 1910-1917.[2][4] Lydham Hall is the only house in Australia open to the public where Christina Stead lived.[4]

Frederick John Gibbins died in 1917 and left no particular instructions for Lydham Hill. Dealings with all his properties were left at the discretion of the executors of his will, oldest daughter Emma (Pattison) and son-in-law and accountant, husband of Gibbins' daughter Amy, William Thom. Thom and Pattison subdivided and sold both Dappeto and Lydham Hill, therefore the Steads moved to Watsons Bay. Sometime between 1917 and the mid 1920s, the property became known as Lydham Hall.

Lydham Hall was purchased by the Rockdale Municipal Council in 1970 in order to preserve the building, and was opened on 20 February 1971 to the public as a museum, as part of the Rockdale Municipality centenary celebration.[2]: 29  It became a home to the first and only local museum within the area.[citation needed] The Lydham Hall Historic House and Museum houses a collection consisting of items donated by the public to the St George Historical Society by the local and wider community, and also displays furniture on loan from the National Trust of Australia (NSW).[2][failed verification] The establishment of the museum and building of its collection became the longest social project that combined the efforts of the local residents, the local council and the St George Historical Society.[2]: 31 

Description[edit]

The building of Lydham Hall commenced no earlier than 1872, and was completed no later than 1879.[1]: 92  This well preserved example of the early Australian rural homestead contains four large rooms, each 14x20' with a 10' wide centrally placed hall. A narrow staircase at the southern side of the hall reaches two upper rooms, each 18' 6" square lit by near dormer windows. Full length windows face north, east and south to take advantage of the cool sea breezes whilst those facing west are conventionally smaller to keep the hot westerlies at bay.

Averandah once extended around all four sides of the house supported on open work cast iron columns. The hip roof of the house is covered with blue slates and there are a series of small decorated brackets beneath the narrow eaves. The two wide chimneys are of unusual design and each has a drip skirt placed above the flashing.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e Pelosi, Janette (2023), Joseph Davis, from Lidham Hill to Lydham Hall (PDF), retrieved 21 June 2024
  • ^ a b c d e f g h Sedneva, Olga. (2023). The Lydham Hill Tale
  • ^ "David George Stead (1877–1957)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. ISBN 978-0-522-84459-7. ISSN 1833-7538. OCLC 70677943.
  • ^ a b Olga Sedneva (2023). "Between the Lines. Behind the Doors" (PDF). Retrieved 5 May 2024.
  • Bibliography[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lydham_Hall&oldid=1232737573"

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    This page was last edited on 5 July 2024, at 10:11 (UTC).

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