Historic
Lansdowne Bridge 10
July 1957 The Biz (Fairfield, NSW) (By
Tom Fitzpatrick) |
As I drove over Lansdowne Bridge
recently and noted the comparatively slow progress of the new
bridge, being built to help cope with' present-day traffic requirements,
my thoughts went back to the building of the first Lansdowne Bridge completed
by convict gangs, with the primitive equipment of the times, in a period
of two years. Now 121 years old, historic Lansdowne
Bride, a masterpiece of the skill of the late David, Lennox, has witnessed, many changes from title slow- moving
and lumbering bullock waggons, bringing wool
and wheat from the hinterland, to the rubber-shod motor traffic of
to-day. It has heard the clank of the chain
gang in the bad old days when this was a penal settlement,
and the mail coach ratted over it for twenty years prior to the
opening of the railway to Liverpool, and today Lansdowne Bridge is as solid
as the day it was first opened. Following the bullock tracks, the
Great Southern Road, or Hume Highway as it is now called, was partly
formed in 1806 and a low-level bridge, known as "Bowler's
Bridge," was erected. The name Bowler was derived from mine
host Bowler, who kept the adjoining "Grey-hound Inn." As the bridge was frequently flooded
and damaged, it was decided to erect a stone bridge. But bridge builders in those early
colonial days were hard to find. One day Major Mitchell chanced to
walk along Macquarie Street, Sydney, and noticed a man cutting stone for the
dwarf wall outside the Legislature Council Chambers, now known as
Parliament House, and observing his skill entered into conversation
with him. He learned that the workman was David
Lennox, a recent arrival with bridge building experience, having
been foreman on the building of the Gloucester Bridge across the Severn
River. Mitchell engaged him as a bridge
builder for the sum of £120 per annum. His first job was to construct a
bridge on the then Western Road at Lap- stone Hill. The bridge
still stands and is well worth the deviation from the Western Highway at
Emu Plains for an inspection. Lansdowne Bridge, over Prospect Creek,
was his next work, and was of similar design to the Gloucester
Bridge. The stone was quarried some seven
miles down stream opposite East Hills, a
favourite picnic place for Liverpool folk years ago, then known as The Quarries. The Governor of the time, Sir Richard
Bourke, laid the foundation stone on January 1st, 1834. An engraved brass plate and some
coins were deposited beneath the stone, but "disappeared"
before the mortar was dry. In his speech the Governor
announced that he intended to call the structure Lansdowne Bridge
after the President of Her Majesty's Council. The bridge took two years to build
at a cost of "rather more .than £1000" and was opened by
Governor Bourke on Anniversary Day, January 26th 1836 before a huge gathering
including Navy officers of the colony and about 1000 spectators. A procession followed His Excellency
over the bridge, and consisted of twelve dray loads of wool, a cart
containing two casks of wine from "Regentville"
the estate of Sir John Jamieson at Penrith, an Agora goat and some
pure Saxon sheep belonging to Mr. Riley of Raby, a cart, with two emus, and
a native boy followed by a cart containing samples of colonial
grain and fruit. The bridge was then declared
open. In the early days of the colony tolls
were levied on important roads leading out of Sydney. The first toll gate was situated
at Bowler's Bridge, over Prospect Creek, and transferred to Lansdowne Bridge upon
its opening. The toll gates operated until
1873. The last toll master being Mr.
Thomas Kelly, who then acquired the property now known as Hargrave Park, and where for many years he conducted
one of the most successful vineyards in the district. Messrs. James and John Kelly, of
Liverpool are sons of the late Thomas Kelly. My grandparents
often spoke of a fatal accident at Lansdowne Toll Gates, where a bolting
horse with vehicle crashed into the gates, killing the occupant. Next time you dross over Lansdowne
Bridge take note of two blocks of sandstone (on the Bankstown side)
about thirty yards from the bridge, I understand they mark the site of the
toll gates. Probably the earliest shop in the
district was a butcher's, owned by a Mr. Woods, who later sold out to
the late George Knight who carried on the business for some time, and was
situated adjacent to the bridge. His son George Knight, a
well-known long distance bike rider of the period about 1911, still
lives at Lansdowne, or Lansvale as it is now known. |