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Grenville Cottage
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Pitt Town
Historic town on the outskirts of Sydney.
Located approximately 60 km north west of Sydney, Pitt Town
is one of the five 'Macquarie Towns' established by Governor
Macquarie in 1810.
The Cattai Road near Pitt Town offers splendid views over
the rich alluvial Hawkesbury river flats across to Windsor.
In the distance, on a clear day, it is possible to see the
smoky green-blue of the Blue Mountains.
In some ways Pitt Town is the most impressive of all the
Macquarie Towns. Like Wilberforce, Windsor, and Richmond, it
was planned in 1810 and named after William Pitt the Elder
(the famous eighteenth century British statesman and prime
minister). A site for a village was laid out in 1811 but it
was never as good, in terms of its land, as the other sites.
Macquarie observed that 'the ground is not so good or so
conveniently situated for the settlers in general as might
be wished, it being not less than 3 1/2 miles from some of
the few of the front farms; but no better is to be had and
therefore there is no alternative left but to place the town
on these heights...the great square, burying ground, and the
principal streets being all marked by strong posts...and the
post, with the name of the town nailed to it, has been
erected in the centre of the great square.'
The problem was that the village was located too far from
the rich river flats and consequently the farmers had no
desire to make the long daily trek from the town to their
holdings. The result was that by 1841 there were only 36
houses in the town.
The importance of Pitt Town is that it evolved slowly.
Today it is true that there is much modern development but
once you get into the back streets there are excellent old
buildings standing as they did over 100 years ago.
Things to see:
Walking through Pitt Town
Strolling throughout this delightful village may take as
long as it does in Windsor because its buildings are quite
widely distributed, but the visitor will soon discover why A
Country Practice used this village for so many shots.
Of particular interest are the former Maid of Australia
Inn, a typical street corner inn located at 87 Bathurst
Street which operated between the 1850s and 1890s. At 104
Bathurst Street are the remnants of the Blighton Arms which
dates from the earliest years of the town. The original
owner, Henry Fleming, lost his license in 1819 but re-opened
in 1830 calling the building the Macquarie Arms.
Adjacent is Mulgrave Place, a house built in 1823 with a
more modern verandah (about 1860) and north wing (1913).
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St James Anglican Church
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Further along the street are the towns two churches, St
James' Anglican Church (behind which is a flood marker) and
the Scots Presbyterian Church. St James was designed by
Edmund Blacket and built by Thomas Collison for £1050 in
1857-58. Blacket also designed the 24 pews, pulpit, reading
desk and communion rail. It is a typical Early English stone
church which, at the time, Blacket seemed to be designing at
a furious rate. Scots Church, a much simpler building than
St James, was built and dedicated in 1862.
Further along Bathurst Street there are a number of late
nineteenth century weatherboard houses (120, 126, 132) and,
at 132 Bathurst Street there are some very old slab cottages
and outbuildings.
One of the town's most impressive buildings is Bona Vista
in Johnston Street which was built in 1888. The long
entrance drive with its Norfolk Island pines and camphor
laurels give the dwelling a prestige which does not exist in
the other dwellings.
Beyond Bathurst Street turn into Pitt Town Bottoms Road.
This was the location of the first settlement in the
district. It was here, in 1794, that Lieutenant-Governor
Francis Grose granted fifteen 30 acre farms to a number of
free settlers and it was from here that much of the fresh
produce for the infant colony was shipped down the
Hawkesbury to Sydney town.
A curious reminder of the importance of the Hawkesbury
River and the fertile river flats for life in Pitt Town lies
at the bottom of Bathurst Street overlooking the Pitt Town
Bottoms. The Old Manse at Pitt Town belongs in fact to the
oldest Presbyterian Church in Australia situated down river
at Ebenezer showing that the early communities were not then
divided by the river - rather they were united by it.
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Pitt Town