Macdonaldtown

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Macdonaldtown
Sydney,  New South Wales
Macdonaldtown railway station entrance.jpg
Macdonaldtown railway station entrance
Postcode(s) 2042
Location4 km (2 mi) south-west of Sydney CBD
LGA(s) City of Sydney
Localities around Macdonaldtown:
Erskineville Newtown Camperdown
Alexandria Macdonaldtown Eveleigh
Redfern Golden Grove Darlington

Macdonaldtown was previously a suburb in Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. The suburb was incorporated Erskineville and Newtown. All that remains of Macdonaldtown's legacy is Macdonaldtown railway station. Macdonaldtown was 4 kilometres south-west of the Sydney central business district, adjacent to the suburbs of Newtown, Eveleigh and Erskineville. Macdonaldtown is informally part of the region of the Inner West.

Contents

History

Macdonaldtown Map 1886 -1889 (City of Sydney Archives) Map Macdonaldtown 1886-1889 Map 1193-24A-Macdonaldtown.tiff
Macdonaldtown Map 1886 -1889 (City of Sydney Archives)

The suburb of Macdonaldtown was named for Stephen Macdonald, who owned property in the south of the area. It was advertised with the name "Macdonald Town". [1] The whole suburb of Macdonald was incorporated as a local government area in 1872 and was renamed as Erskineville in 1893. [1] The area was renamed after the local Reverend George's "Erskine's villa" because they wanted the blue-collar town to have a nice, "virtuous" name and it would drive property prices up in the tough, working class area. [2]

The area of Macdonaldtown/Erskineville was established as a residential and farming area in the early 19th century. [3] Nicholas Devine, the first principal superintendent of convicts called his property Burren Farm, after a region of County Clare in his native Ireland. Burren Farm would later become parts of Macdonaldtown (now Erskineville) and Newtown . [4] Devine Street is named after Nicholas Devine and Burren Street is named after his farm.

The streets around the early Macdonaldtown subdivision are named after relations of the Macdonald family - Amy, Flora, Eve, Coulson and Rochford. Knight Street is named for Henry Knight, one of the earliest brickmakers in the district and the first mayor of Macdonaldtown.

The area was first incorporated on 23 May 1872, with the name of the "Municipal District of Macdonald Town" (but was variously known as the "Borough of Macdonald Town" or the "Municipality of Macdonaldtown"). [5] On 19 July 1872, the first council, consisting of six aldermen in one electorate, was elected (Charles Brandling Henderson, Henry Knight, James Bryan, Alexander Swanson, William Irwin and James Heighington), with Henry Knight elected as the first mayor at the first meeting on 23 July 1872. [6] [7]

In 1893 Macdonaldtown was renamed as Erskineville, when the Parliament of New South Wales passed the "Borough of Erskineville Naming Act, 1893", effecting the municipal name change. [8] [9] In the late nineteenth century, the inhabitants were originally market gardeners, though brick making and tanning also became dominant industries. The Victorian cottages and small rows of Victorian terraces that dominate the built form of the suburb were the homes of the workers in these industries, which explains their smallness: a four-metre wide terrace is large by Erskineville standards.

Notable residents

The house in Burren Street, Macdonaldtown, where John and Sarah Makin AKA The Hatpin Murderers resided (from the Illustrated Sydney News, 12 November 1892) Makin house Burren street Macdonaldtown.jpg
The house in Burren Street, Macdonaldtown, where John and Sarah Makin AKA The Hatpin Murderers resided (from the Illustrated Sydney News, 12 November 1892)

John and Sarah Makin also known as the Hatpin Murderers were 'baby farmers' who were convicted for murder 1892 after bodies of infants were found buried in the yard of their Macdonaldtown home [10]

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References

  1. 1 2 "The Names of Sydney: Suburbs M to P". Visit Sydney Australia.
  2. "Historian reveals the real reason Sydney's Macdonaldtown disappeared off the map".
  3. Time-line of the Newtown Municipal Area Archived 29 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  4. "A ROMANCE OF NEWTOWN". The Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954). 30 July 1923.
  5. "PROCLAMATION". Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales . No. 144. New South Wales, Australia. 23 May 1872. p. 1333. Retrieved 24 September 2016 via National Library of Australia.
  6. "MUNICIPAL DISTRICT OF MACDONALD TOWN". Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales. No. 203. New South Wales, Australia. 23 July 1872. p. 1865. Retrieved 24 September 2016 via National Library of Australia.
  7. "Advertising". Sydney Morning Herald . Vol. LXVI, no. 10, 663. New South Wales, Australia. 22 July 1872. p. 1. Retrieved 24 September 2016 via National Library of Australia.
  8. "No. VII. An Act to alter the name of the Municipality of Macdonaldtown to the Borough of Erskineville. [Assented to, 27th March, 1893.]". Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales. No. 211. New South Wales, Australia. 29 March 1893. p. 2583. Retrieved 24 September 2016 via National Library of Australia.
  9. The Book of Sydney Suburbs, Compiled by Frances Pollen, Angus & Robertson Publishers, 1990, Published in Australia ISBN   0-207-14495-8, page 102
  10. "I lived in Sydney's most infamous murder house. It taught me about the horrifying history of 'baby farming'". SBS News. Retrieved 26 June 2024.

Sources

33°53′49″S151°11′12″E / 33.896886°S 151.186767°E / -33.896886; 151.186767