ESTATE

HISTORIC HOUSES TRUST
John Macarthur’s Elizabeth Farm estate once stretched from present day Good Street, to the start of Duck Creek; from the Parramatta River to Granville. His farmhouse sat on a small hillside, facing north across grassy fields and tidal flats flanking Parramatta River. From this position, his house was visible from the north, east and west for miles beyond. No doubt aided by army surveyors, the best in the business, this slightly elevated knoll gave Macarthur an unbroken line of sight all the way to Pennant Hills.
Increased to nearly 1000 acres by the 1820s, much of the estate remained uncleared and unsuitable for European farming, particularly the swampy mangroves along Duck Creek. The industrial plants and refineries, built from the early 1900s, were first to make use of land in the east. The western areas close to town, between the river and Parramatta Road, were cleared and fenced for grazing, orchards and feed crops although the Macarthurs quickly realized that tilling the soil was tough and unprofitable.
Elizabeth Farm was sold in 1881, over burdened with debt, its owners overseas. A few years later, sections of the estate were back on the market divided into housing blocks. Bounded by railway, town and river, interlaced with new roads and a racecourse opened in 1885, the subdivisions of Rosehill were soon a sea of building sites. The land around the house, auctioned in 1906, was slow to attract buyers with only 2 blocks sold by 1914. However, ten years later, most blocks were built on, with town water, gas and sewerage.
The ‘frontage’ of Elizabeth Farm was reversed with the creation of Alice Street in 1923.The survival of 1920s street trees reflect the area's inter-war character while about half the houses built on these early subdivisions remain intact. After 1940, the concrete channelling of Clay Cliff Creek encouraged further concentration of housing, particularly to the north of Elizabeth Farm. Post-war migrants moved favoured heavier brick and tile constructions, while the 1970s saw large flats, often poorly designed and poorly built, begin to dominate the area.













