Showing posts with label Francis Greenway. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Francis Greenway. Show all posts

Thursday, 3 March 2016

A "Sydney Living Museum" Pass



I have a Sydney Living Museum 3-month pass, that enables me to see four named museums for an investment of $8.

I saw the Museum of Sydney first, which is on Bridge Stree, down near Circular Quay, on the site of the first Government House. Then I went through the Justice & Police Museum, which is on Phillip Street, also down near Circular Quay. My third museum is this one: Hyde Park Barracks.




Hyde Park Barracks is on Macquarie Street adjacent to Hyde Park. It was commissioned by Governor Lachlan Macquarie, and designed and overseen by Francis Greenway. In 1817 it was ready for its first intake of convicts. From 1788 until then, convicts were mostly able to spend the night wherever they could find a roof. Where else were they going to run off too? Sydney was down the nether-end of the world! Those who did try to escape, died quickly in the unforgiving bush.




Tuesday, 4 September 2012

St Matthews, Windsor


Windsor is one of the five townships declared by Governor Lachlan Macquarie in 1810: Windsor, Richmond, Castlereagh, Pitt Town, and, Wilberforce.

St Matthews Anglican Church in Windsor, designed by the convict architect, Francis Greenway, was founded in 1820.

Monday, 13 September 2010

The sound of egos colliding

Hobartville Stud at Richmond
And so ... History Week fades for yet another year, not with a whimper but a bang! And that boom-crash-wallop was the sound of egos colliding in the early colony. Macquarie with Greenway which was grandly reciprocated. Macquarie with Bigge where the better man lost. Greenway with Bigge where the more talented man lost. Greenway with Kitchen where the younger man didn't realise it was a contest! The real winner, as it turned out, is the citizenry of Sydney who probably don't much give a toss!!

Above Left: The Rectory at Windsor; Above Right: the Rectory's stables; Below: St Matthew's Windsor
On Saturday, we bused around the Macquarie Towns checking out St Matthew's at Windsor and its Rectory which is where young Henry Kitchen earned the ire of Greenway for competing for the Governor's patronage. Kitchen literally gave up the ghost.

Then onto 'Hobartville' at Richmond which is attributed to Greenway for all sorts of architectural reasons. It is a stunning setting and really rustic collection of outhouses not generally open to the public. More on that tomorrow. This tour was led by Scott Carlin from the Historic Houses Trust.

We finished our inspections with a wander around Greenlees at Menangle across the river from John MacArthur's Camden estate. The gestation of this building is all very skulduggery with both Kitchen and Greenway involved in the plans and the building of same. But with Kitchen carking it and Greenway generally getting everyone offside, it is a rollicking yarn. Macquarie by this time had been recalled for being too profligate.

Left: Entrance to Hyde Park Barracks; Right: St James from HP Barracks

On Sunday with the pealing of church bells resounding in our ears, we accompanied Robert Griffin, Curator of The Mint, around the Queen's Square precinct at the head of Macquarie Street, where he elaborated on the design 'phases' of the area and the various proposals for a 'haussman-like' makeover, especially after the 1909 Royal Commission. The aim was to gain an understanding of the urban design involved in the siting of Hyde Park Barracks, The Mint (and the original three-winged hospital), St James, and the Supreme Court buildings.

Above: The spire atop St James; Below Left: detail from St James northern wall; Below Right: the vista down to the Supreme Court
I have yet to track down the church and hospital in Liverpool attributed to Greenway and also a private dwelling in Cleveland Street Surry Hills also attributed to Greenway. Lots of other structures designed by Greenway (and often supervised by Greenway who came from a family of buildings from Bristol, and who rode builders something terrible), have gone the way of Whelan-the-wrecker.

Greenlees at Menangle